REPOZYTORIUM UNIWERSYTETU
W BIAŁYMSTOKU
UwB

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Tytuł: Limiting the Right of Access to Public Information in the Age of COVID-19 – Case Study of Poland
Autorzy: Jabłoński, Mariusz
Kuźnicka-Błaszkowska, Dominika
Słowa kluczowe: democratic state of law
epidemic state
human rights
right to information
Data wydania: 2022
Data dodania: 28-cze-2022
Wydawca: Faculty of Law, University of Białystok; Temida 2
Źródło: Białostockie Studia Prawnicze, Vol. 27 nr 2, 2022, s. 207-221
Abstrakt: The right of access to public information is one of the most fundamental political rights granted to citizens under Art. 61 of the Polish Constitution. In the Act of 6 September 2001, not only was the procedure for providing the public information specified, but also some detailed rules on obliged entities. In practice, the right to access public information not only enables citizens to take mature political decisions, but also prevents the abuse, corruption, nepotism or waste of public funds. The transparency of public administration actions forces its representatives to behave by the book and to respect the rules governing a democratic state of law as well as human rights. Undoubtedly, the full implementation of the right of access to public information may not be possible in urgent and unexpected scenarios such as a state of emergency or martial law, but any restrictions should always be introduced in a proportionate manner and only to the extent necessary to protect other (more important) goods and values. The epidemic threat facing Poland in March 2020, followed by the state of the epidemic and the accompanying activities of the broadly understood legislator, have significantly impacted the implementation of the openness principle and the right to access public information in the country. Simultaneously, doubts were raised not only due to the scope and nature of these changes, but also because of their constitutionality. In order to obtain a full picture of these threats to the implementation of the law in question, one must take into account possible decisions of the Constitutional Tribunal (with positive or negative effects) in cases that will be ruled on soon. The analysis that we present is aimed not only at determining whether the functioning of the state in the epidemic regime justified the need to limit the constitutional right of access to public information, but also – in a broader systemic context – at demonstrating that the transparency standards existing in our national model need to be strengthened, not weakened.
Afiliacja: Mariusz Jabłoński: University of Wroclaw, Poland
Dominika Kuźnicka-Błaszkowska: University of Wroclaw, Poland
Nota biograficzna: Mariusz Jabłoński – Full Professor, Head of Department of Constitutional Law at the Faculty of Law, Administration and Economics of the University of Wroclaw, Poland. Author of over 350 publications in the field of constitutional law, human rights and access to public information or personal data protection.
Dominika Kuźnicka-Błaszkowska – PhD, principal investigator and lecturer at the Department of Constitutional Law, Faculty of Law, Administration and Economics, University of Wroclaw, Poland. Team Lead of Legal Data Protection Team of the International Investment Bank. Author of several publications in the field of access to public information and personal data protection.
E-mail: Mariusz Jabłoński - mariusx@prawo.uni.wroc.pl
Dominika Kuźnicka-Błaszkowska - dominika.kuznicka-blaszkowska@uwr.edu.pl
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11320/13503
DOI: 10.15290/bsp.2022.27.02.12
ISSN: 1689–7404
e-ISSN: 2719–9452
metadata.dc.identifier.orcid: 0000-0001-8347-1884
0000-0001-8804-569X
Typ Dokumentu: Article
metadata.dc.rights.uri: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Właściciel praw: © 2022 Mariusz Jabłoński, Dominika Kuźnicka-Błaszkowska published by Sciendo. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
Występuje w kolekcji(ach):Białostockie Studia Prawnicze, 2022, Vol. 27 nr 2

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