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In: Chicago studies in practices of meaning
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Intro -- Title Page -- Front Matter -- Forward -- Prologue 1 -- Prologue 2 -- Prologue 3 -- Prelude -- Chapter One: The Messenger -- Chapter Two: Calls of Duty -- Chapter Three: 'Temujin' -- Chapter Four: In Another Man's Shoes -- Chapter Five: The Evil That Men Do -- Chapter Six: A Change of Heart -- Chapter Seven: The Order -- Chapter Eight: A Method to the Madness -- Chapter Nine: A Red Tie Event -- Chapter Ten: Agents of Change -- Epilogue -- About the Author.
World Affairs Online
As governments engage in public-private partnerships, they have devised ways to shield the public's business from the traditional level scrutiny offered by citizens and journalists, watchdogs of the public trust. The authors propose rethinking public oversight of private vendors doing government business. First, the authors explore the historical and legal background of open records laws. This core purpose is undermined by overly broad interpretations of trade secrets and competitive harm exceptions, a trend exacerbated by the U.S. Supreme Court in a 2019 ruling. The authors demonstrate why public-private collusion to sabotage transparency demands a reinvigorated approach to the quasi-government body doctrine, which has been sharply limited for decades. The authors conclude with recommendations on reversing the trend.
BASE
As governments engage in public-private partnerships, they have devised ways to shield the public's business from the traditional level scrutiny offered by citizens and journalists, watchdogs of the public trust. The authors propose rethinking public oversight of private vendors doing government business. First, the authors explore the historical and legal background of open records laws. This core purpose is undermined by overly broad interpretations of trade secrets and competitive harm exceptions, a trend exacerbated by the U.S. Supreme Court in a 2019 ruling. The authors demonstrate why public-private collusion to sabotage transparency demands a reinvigorated approach to the quasi-government body doctrine, which has been sharply limited for decades. The authors conclude with recommendations on reversing the trend.
BASE