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Official secrets --- Secrets d'Etat --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy
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Fathers and sons --- Mothers --- Official secrets --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Death --- Massachusetts
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Executive privilege (Government information) --- Government information --- Official secrets --- Privilège de l'exécutif (Information sur l'Etat) --- History --- Histoire --- 342.4 <73> --- -Government information --- -Official secrets --- -Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Information, Government --- Freedom of information --- Public records --- Grondwet--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- -Grondwet--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- 342.4 <73> Grondwet--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Privilège de l'exécutif (Information sur l'Etat) --- Disclosing official secrets --- Legislative right to information from executive agencies --- Executive power --- Governmental investigations --- Separation of powers --- History.
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This report provides an in-depth, evidence-based analysis of open government initiatives and the challenges countries face in implementing and co-ordinating them. It also explores new trends in OECD member countries as well as a selection of countries from Latin America, MENA and South East Asia regions. Based on the 2015 Survey on Open Government and Citizen Participation in the Policy Cycle, the report identifies future areas of work, including the effort to mobilise and engage all branches and all levels of government in order to move from open governments to open states; how open government principles and practices can help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals; the role of the Media to create an enabling environment for open government initiatives to thrive; and the growing importance of subnational institutions to implement successful open government reforms.
Government information. --- Official secrets. --- Freedom of information. --- Freedom of information --- Information, Freedom of --- Liberty of information --- Right to know --- Civil rights --- Freedom of speech --- Intellectual freedom --- Telecommunication --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Information, Government --- Public records --- Law and legislation
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Government information --- -Official secrets --- -#SBIB:35H006 --- #SBIB:35H6014 --- #SBIB:35H500 --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Information, Government --- Freedom of information --- Public records --- Bestuurswetenschappen: theorieën --- Bestuur en beleid: nationale en regionale studies: Verenigd Koninkrijk --- Bestuur en samenleving: algemene werken --- Official secrets --- #SBIB:35H006
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The controversy surrounding the publication of Richard Crossman's Cabinet Diaries (1975) brought to the fore opposing concepts of 'open' and 'closed' government within Britain's free society. While a balance has for the moment been struck concerning the secrecy of Cabinet proceedings, a historical question remains: by what process, and with what results, has official secrecy come to envelop the practices of modern Cabinet government? This book tackles that key question, drawing upon a uniquely wide range of official and private papers to examine the historical development of the Cabinet Office, the custodian of Cabinet secrecy. Established by Lloyd George in the administrative chaos of 1916, the Cabinet Secretariat - as it was first known - emerged as the central agency for the management of Cabinet business, working closely with the Prime Minister himself. In Sir Maurice Hankey's twenty-two-year term as Cabinet secretary, he presided over the institutionalisation of the Secretariat as an office free from partisan taint and he personally served all Britain's inter-war Prime Ministers as confidant and influential advisor.
Official secrets --- Statesmen --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- History --- Hankey, Maurice Pascal Alers Hankey, --- Great Britain. --- History. --- Great Britain --- Politics and government --- Arts and Humanities
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Secrecy --- Privacy, Right of --- Official secrets --- Psychological aspects --- -Concealment --- Privacy --- Hiding places --- Invasion of privacy --- Right of privacy --- Civil rights --- Libel and slander --- Personality (Law) --- Press law --- Computer crimes --- Confidential communications --- Data protection --- Right to be forgotten --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Law and legislation --- -Psychological aspects --- Secrecy - Psychological aspects
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351.82*8 --- Confidential communications --- -Official secrets --- -347.965.3 <492> --- 343.452 <492> --- 35.083.8 <492> --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Communications, Confidential --- Confidential relationships --- Confidentiality --- Privileged communications (Confidential communications) --- Professional secrets --- Secrets, Professional --- Confession --- Evidence (Law) --- Objections (Evidence) --- Personality (Law) --- Professional ethics --- Privacy, Right of --- Beroepenrecht. Vestigingswetgeving --- Law and legislation --- 351.82*8 Beroepenrecht. Vestigingswetgeving --- Official secrets --- 347.965.3 <492>
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"The threat of terrorism and the increasing power of terrorist groups has prompted a rapid growth of the security services and changes in legislation, permitting the collection of communications data. This provides journalism with acute dilemmas. The media claims responsibility for holding power to account, yet cannot know more than superficial details about the newly empowered secret services. This book is the first to analyze, in the aftermath of the Snowden/NSA revelations, relations between two key institutions in the modern state: the intelligence services and the news media. It provides the answers to crucial questions including: how can power be held to account if one of the greatest state powers is secret? How far have the Snowden/NSA revelations damaged the activities of the secret services? And have governments lost all trust from journalists and the public?"--P. [4] of cover.
Government and the press. --- Intelligence service --- Journalism. --- Official secrets. --- Press coverage. --- Counter intelligence --- Counterespionage --- Counterintelligence --- Intelligence community --- Secret police (Intelligence service) --- Public administration --- Research --- Disinformation --- Secret service --- Press --- Press and government --- Press policy --- State and the press --- Freedom of the press --- Press and politics --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Writing (Authorship) --- Literature --- Publicity --- Fake news --- Government policy
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Administrative law --- 35.077 <492> --- Freedom of information --- -Government information --- -Official secrets --- -35.07 <492> --- overheidsadministraties --- nederland --- Disclosing official secrets --- Government secrecy --- Secrecy in government --- Secrets, Official --- Secrets of state --- Confidential communications --- Criminal law --- Government and the press --- Government information --- Ministerial responsibility --- Secrecy --- Information, Government --- Public records --- Information, Freedom of --- Liberty of information --- Right to know --- Civil rights --- Freedom of speech --- Intellectual freedom --- Telecommunication --- Bestuurshandelingen. Administratieve besluitvormingsprocedure. Acten, arresten, besluiten, decreten, documenten, publicaties van overheidsinstellingen--Nederland --- administrations publiques --- pays bas --- Law and legislation --- Official secrets --- Netherlands. --- 35.077 <492> Bestuurshandelingen. Administratieve besluitvormingsprocedure. Acten, arresten, besluiten, decreten, documenten, publicaties van overheidsinstellingen--Nederland --- 35.07 <492> --- Netherlands
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