recognizing the municipality of
Santa Barbara, Pangasinan for its "efforts in advancing the principles of
accountability and transparency in
local governance" The right and the means to examine the process of decision making is known as transparency. In politics, transparency is used as a means of holding
public officials accountable and fighting
corruption. When a
government's meetings are open to the
press and the public, its
budgets may be reviewed by anyone, and its laws and decisions are open to discussion, it is seen as transparent. It is not clear however if this provides less opportunity for the authorities to abuse the system for their own interests. When military authorities
classify their plans as secret, transparency is absent. This can be seen as either positive or negative; positive because it can increase
national security, negative because it can lead to corruption and, in extreme cases, a
military dictatorship. While a
liberal democracy can be a
plutocracy, where decisions are made behind locked doors and the people have fewer possibilities to influence politics between the elections, a
participative democracy is more closely connected to the will of the people. Participative democracy, built on transparency and everyday participation, has been used officially in northern
Europe for decades. In the northern European country
Sweden,
public access to government documents became a law as early as 1766. It has officially been adopted as an ideal to strive for by the rest of EU, leading to measures like
freedom of information laws and
laws for lobby transparency. To promote transparency in
politics,
Hans Peter Martin,
Paul van Buitenen (
Europa Transparant) and
Ashley Mote decided to cooperate under the name Platform for Transparency (PfT) in 2005. Similar organizations that promotes transparency are
Transparency International and the
Sunlight Foundation. A recent political movement to emerge in conjunction with the demands for transparency is the
Pirate Party, a label for a number of political parties across different countries who advocate freedom of information, direct democracy, network neutrality, and the free sharing of knowledge. ==Online culture==