Worth a Look: Books on Government Secrecy

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Government Secrecy

Susan Maret, Contributing Editor

Emerald Group, January 2011

$164.95 shipping within 2-3 weeks

Government secrecy (GS) is a significant social, political, and policy issue and often presents as a barrier to civic participation, public right-to-know, historical understanding, and institutional accountability. This volume examines GS in a variety of contexts, including comparative examination of government control of information, new definitions, categories, censorship, ethics, and secrecy's relationship with freedom of information and transparency. It investigates GS in terms of its current theoretical descriptions as power over and concealment of information (Bok 1983), a ‘tampering of communications' (Friedrich 1972), the ‘compulsory withholding of knowledge, reinforced by the prospects of sanctions for disclosure' (Shils), or Georg Simmel's (1906) idea of secrecy creating the ‘possibility of a second world'. Following the introduction this book is divided into the following six sections: Government Secrecy: Theoretical Musings; Government Secrecy and the Media; Government Secrecy and Technology; Freedom of Information; Government Secrecy: Current Policy; and Ethics. Articles are sourced from around the world and include some from USA, Mexico, Africa, Israel and Britain.

Phi Beta Iota: The publishers are unethical cretins.  The editor and authors would have been vastly better served by using Amazon's CreateSpace where $267.00 and a pdf get the book into the ethical low-cost On Demand circuit.

See Instead:

Amazon on Government Secrecy

Amazon on Government Secrets

DuckDuckGo on Government Secrecy

DuckDuckGo on Government Secrets

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