The Man Who Invented Freedom of Information
Anders Chydenius is hardly a well-known name; it should be:Last year, the Anders Chydenius Foundation celebrated the 240th anniversary of the world's first Freedom of Information Act. Sweden and Finland were one big empire in those days, and the Swedish-Finnish law -- passed in 1766, two hundred years before a similar law was passed by the U.S. Congress, and ensuring open access to all government papers and other kinds of information under a "principle of public access" -- was largely the product of one man's visionary ethical ideas.
Good news, though: you can read his masterpiece, The National Gain, which seems to be pretty similar to Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, but predating it by 11 years, online and in English thanks to the Anders Chydenius Foundation.
Free, of course.
2 comments:
Awesome! Thanks for this.
Unlike Wealth of Nations, The National Gain is short enough to print out and read on the bus -- which is exactly what I'm going to do.
Glad to pass it on. I agree - it looks a pretty amazing story.
Post a Comment