Access to ITU Information and Documents

Access to ITU information /
documents
KEY CONCEPTS
Definition: Access
In the work of the Dedicated Group, “access”
refers to:
The right of members of the public to locate and
retrieve information for use (consultation or
reference)
The right of private individuals to request and
receive information from the Organization
Decisions required
What types of information could/should be
made available to the public?
What types of information should 
not
 be
made available to the public?  Why not?
May wish to consider 
when
 access
could/should be provided.
Access could vary over time
Issue:  
Which stages of the process should be open to
public access?  
When
 should access be provided?
Different forms, different purposes
The same information may exist in different
forms at different times for different purposes.
It may be important to consider the 
purpose
:
Background document for discussion (restricted
access)
Report of discussions (may be available to the
public?)
Publication of outcome (for public dissemination)
What the discussion is NOT about
It is essential to 
first
 decide 
what
 types of
information could/should be made available
to the public.
Issues of implementation and procedure can
only be addressed later
Cost of access
Method(s) of access
Right vs Cost
Information may be made available to the
public at a cost or free of charge
For example, ITU produces a wide variety of
publications for sale
Must not confuse discussions about providing
the 
right to access 
types of information with
discussions about providing 
cost-free access 
to
information
Availability of information
How
 information is made available is a separate
issue from the 
right to access
Public access may be provided in many ways:
Information routinely posted on ITU website
Publications for sale
Information provided upon request (e.g., for
documents not regularly posted on the website; for
historic documents only available in paper format)
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Exploring the concept of access in the work of a dedicated group, this content delves into the types of information that could or should be made available to the public, along with considerations on when access should be provided. It highlights the varying stages of information dissemination, discussing different forms and purposes of information in different contexts. The discussion emphasizes the distinction between providing access and addressing the implementation and procedural aspects. Additionally, it touches on the balance between the right to access information and the associated costs.

  • ITU
  • Information Access
  • Public Disclosure
  • Document Availability
  • Data Dissemination

Uploaded on Oct 02, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Access to ITU information / documents KEY CONCEPTS

  2. Definition: Access In the work of the Dedicated Group, access refers to: The right of members of the public to locate and retrieve information for use (consultation or reference) The right of private individuals to request and receive information from the Organization

  3. Decisions required What types of information could/should be made available to the public? What types of information should not be made available to the public? Why not? May wish to consider when access could/should be provided.

  4. Access could vary over time Early proposals, preliminary drafts, working papers Review, revision, final drafts Development, discussion/negotiation, testing Decisions, approvals, outcome documents Issue: Which stages of the process should be open to public access? When should access be provided?

  5. Different forms, different purposes The same information may exist in different forms at different times for different purposes. It may be important to consider the purpose: Background document for discussion (restricted access) Report of discussions (may be available to the public?) Publication of outcome (for public dissemination)

  6. What the discussion is NOT about It is essential to first decide what types of information could/should be made available to the public. Issues of implementation and procedure can only be addressed later Cost of access Method(s) of access

  7. Right vs Cost Information may be made available to the public at a cost or free of charge For example, ITU produces a wide variety of publications for sale Must not confuse discussions about providing the right to access types of information with discussions about providing cost-free access to information

  8. Availability of information How information is made available is a separate issue from the right to access Public access may be provided in many ways: Information routinely posted on ITU website Publications for sale Information provided upon request (e.g., for documents not regularly posted on the website; for historic documents only available in paper format)

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