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Constitutionalizing Access
Author(s) -
Jessica Terkovich,
Aryeh Frank
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of civic information
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2641-970X
DOI - 10.32473/joci.v3i1.129179
Subject(s) - constitution , statutory law , supreme court , law , political science , constitutional right , state (computer science) , government (linguistics) , constitutional law , access to information , bill of rights , information access , computer science , linguistics , philosophy , algorithm , library science
State constitutions receive relatively little academic attention, yet they are the source of significant substantive rights—and, when compared to the U.S. Constitution, they are relatively easily amended to comport with contemporary needs and values. Unlike the constitutions of dozens of other nations, the U.S. Constitution contains no explicit recognition of a right to information from the government, and the Supreme Court has declined to infer that such a right exists, apart from narrow exceptions. Conversely, seven states expressly memorialize the public’s right of access to government meetings and records in their constitutions. In this paper, the authors examine case law applying the constitutional right of access, concluding that the right is somewhat underutilized and rarely seems to produce an outcome clearly different from what a litigant could expect relying on state statutory rights alone. 

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