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UNESCO 2021 survey on public access to information successfully launched

Are countries pursuing access to information laws and their implementation? How much progress are they making? Where are the gaps? What support is needed? To what can extent data on access to information improve people’s lives? These critical questions were addressed by six experts on governance, democracy and access to information, among an audience of 50 participants.
The 2021 UNESCO survey will generate new data on the adoption of legal guarantees on Access to Information and main tendencies in implementing these guarantees.
In the context of the COVID pandemic, experience in Sierra Leone demonstrated the importance of access to information.
91鶹Ʒ involved different stakeholders in developing and using the survey’s standardized methodologies to collect data. The survey comprises eight questions assessing both the adoption and the implementation aspects of access to information guarantees. It can be completed by oversight bodies for Access to Information, such as Officers/Commissioners, Data Protection or Privacy Commissioners, Human Rights Commissions, Ombudsmen, and relevant all ministries/departments/agencies – all of whom are encouraged to coordinate their responses with their central SDG bodies.
This global data collection exercise responds to a request made by the Intergovernmental Council of UNESCO’s in 2018. The survey results will be included in UNESCO’s Global Report on the monitoring and reporting on SDG 16.10.2, and publicized as a highlight in the commemoration of the International Day for Universal Access to Information on 28 September 2021. The findings will also feed the on the SDGs.
Equally important, the data used in the survey may be of value for countries at the national level to assess progress towards SDG 16 in their countries. In addition, the information collected through this exercise can feed into the preparation of Voluntary National Review (VNR) reports submitted to the UN High-Level Political Forum on the SDGs, and can be linked to the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) processes, as well as be used in national reporting to national stakeholders, such as the country’s parliament.
UNESCO’s work on access to information has been made possible through the support of , and through the IPDC.
The deadline for submitting data is 3 May 2021.