India’s Right to Information Act and the United Kingdom’s Freedom of Information Act: A Comparative Test of Transparency in Two Parliamentary Democracies
This paper explores how parliamentary democracies convert political responsibility into legally enforceable access to governmental information through transparency law. Using a doctrinal approach that analyses statutory texts, constitutional provisions, case law, and institutional systems, this paper juxtaposes the Right to Information Act, 2005 of India and the Freedom of Information Act 2000 of the United Kingdom. It examines the open-government principles underlying both statutes, but concentrates on the practical and legal implementation of transparency in relation to the administration of exemptions, appeals, and privacy. The analysis suggests that India possesses the more powerful regime, grounded as it is in the constitutional right to free speech and supported by Information Commissions empowered to penalise the wrongful withholding of information, alongside broader rights of access. India nonetheless suffers serious delays in its appellate process and a lack of institutional capacity. The United Kingdom’s system is more developed in legal and procedural terms, but it is more sheltered by privacy balancing, more reliant on administrative timetables, and rests on a more ambiguous constitutional foundation. In recent years both jurisdictions have moved toward a more privacy-centred approach to disclosure, although the Indian regime remains the more democratically anchored of the two.