{"title":"FOIA, Inc.","authors":"Margaret B. Kwoka","doi":"10.1017/9781108697637.009","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Government transparency is imagined as a public good necessary to a robust democracy. Consistent with that vision, Congress enacted the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to allow oversight and accountability of governmental activities, imagining the prime intended users to be journalists. But this democracy-enhancing ideal is at odds with FOIA’s reality: at some agencies, commercial — not public — interests dominate the landscape of FOIA requesters. This Article provides the first in-depth academic study of the commercial use of FOIA, drawing on original datasets from six federal agencies. It documents how corporations, in pursuit of private profit, have overrun FOIA’s supremely inexpensive processes and, in so doing, potentially crowded out journalists and other government watchdogs from doing what the law was intended to facilitate: thirdparty oversight of governmental actors. It also reveals a cottage industry of companies whose entire business model is to request federal records under FOIA and resell them at a profit, which distorts the transparency system even further. Counterintuitively, limiting commercial requesting will not solve this problem. Instead, this Article proposes a targeted and aggressive policy of requiring government agencies to affirmatively disclose sets of records that are the subject of routine FOIA requests — a surprisingly large number of the documents sought by commercial requesters. By meeting information needs in a more efficient manner that is available equally to all, affirmative disclosure will enable federal agencies to reclaim public records from the private market and free up resources to better serve FOIA requests that advance its democratic purpose.","PeriodicalId":305821,"journal":{"name":"LSN: Election Law & Voting Rights (Topic)","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-11-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"29","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"LSN: Election Law & Voting Rights (Topic)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108697637.009","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 29
摘要
政府透明度被认为是一种公共产品,是健全民主所必需的。与这一愿景相一致,国会制定了《信息自由法》(Freedom of Information Act, FOIA),允许对政府活动进行监督和问责,并设想主要的目标用户是记者。但是,这种促进民主的理想与《信息自由法》的现实是不一致的:在一些机构,商业利益——而不是公共利益——主导着《信息自由法》的申请者。本文利用来自六个联邦机构的原始数据集,首次对《信息自由法》的商业用途进行了深入的学术研究。它记录了为了追求私人利益,企业如何超越了《信息自由法》极其廉价的程序,并在这样做的过程中,潜在地排挤了记者和其他政府监督人员,使他们无法履行该法的本意:对政府行为者进行第三方监督。它还揭露了一些公司的家庭手工业,它们的整个商业模式是根据《信息自由法》索取联邦记录,然后转卖这些记录牟利,这进一步扭曲了透明度体系。与直觉相反,限制商业请求并不能解决这个问题。相反,该条提出了一项有针对性和积极的政策,要求政府机构肯定地披露作为《信息自由法》常规请求的主题的一系列记录——商业请求者所寻求的文件数量之多令人惊讶。通过以更有效的方式满足所有人平等获取信息的需要,平权披露将使联邦机构能够从私人市场收回公共记录,释放资源,更好地满足《信息自由法》的要求,促进其民主目的。
Government transparency is imagined as a public good necessary to a robust democracy. Consistent with that vision, Congress enacted the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to allow oversight and accountability of governmental activities, imagining the prime intended users to be journalists. But this democracy-enhancing ideal is at odds with FOIA’s reality: at some agencies, commercial — not public — interests dominate the landscape of FOIA requesters. This Article provides the first in-depth academic study of the commercial use of FOIA, drawing on original datasets from six federal agencies. It documents how corporations, in pursuit of private profit, have overrun FOIA’s supremely inexpensive processes and, in so doing, potentially crowded out journalists and other government watchdogs from doing what the law was intended to facilitate: thirdparty oversight of governmental actors. It also reveals a cottage industry of companies whose entire business model is to request federal records under FOIA and resell them at a profit, which distorts the transparency system even further. Counterintuitively, limiting commercial requesting will not solve this problem. Instead, this Article proposes a targeted and aggressive policy of requiring government agencies to affirmatively disclose sets of records that are the subject of routine FOIA requests — a surprisingly large number of the documents sought by commercial requesters. By meeting information needs in a more efficient manner that is available equally to all, affirmative disclosure will enable federal agencies to reclaim public records from the private market and free up resources to better serve FOIA requests that advance its democratic purpose.