Cargando…

Full disclosure : the perils and promise of transparency /

"Which SUVs are most likely to roll over? What cities have the unhealthiest drinking water? Which factories are the most dangerous polluters? What cereals are most nutritious? In recent decades, governments have sought to provide answers to such critical questions through public disclosure to f...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Fung, Archon, 1968-
Otros Autores: Graham, Mary, 1944-, Weil, David, 1961-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 1. Governance by transparency
  • The new power of information
  • Transparency informs choice
  • Transparency as missed opportunity
  • A real-time experiment
  • Transparency success and failure
  • How the book is organized
  • 2. An unlikely policy innovation
  • An unplanned invention
  • The struggle toward openness
  • Why disclosure?
  • 3. Designing transparency policies
  • Improving on-the-job safety : one goal, many methods
  • Disclosure to create incentives for change
  • What targeted transparency policies have in common
  • Standards, market incentives, or targeted transparency?
  • 4. What makes transparency work?
  • A complex chain reaction
  • New information embedded in user decisions
  • New information embedded in discloser decisions
  • Obstacles : preferences, biases, and games
  • How do transparency policies measure up?
  • Crafting effective transparency policies
  • 5. What makes transparency sustainable?
  • Crisis drives financial disclosure improvements
  • Sustainable policies
  • The politics of disclosure
  • Humble beginnings : prospects for sustainable transparency
  • Two illustrations
  • Shifting conditions drive changes in sustainability
  • 6. International transparency
  • How do international transparency policies work?
  • Why now?
  • From private committee to public mandate : international corporate financial reporting
  • Improving a moribund system : international disease reporting
  • The limits of international transparency : labeling genetically modified foods
  • 7. Toward collaborative transparency
  • Innovation at the edge
  • Technology expands capacities of users, disclosers, and government
  • Four emerging policies
  • Challenges to collaborative transparency
  • New roles for users, disclosers, and government
  • Looking ahead : complementary generations of transparency
  • 8. Targeted transparency in the information age
  • Two possible futures
  • When transparency won't work
  • Crafting effective policies
  • The road ahead
  • Appendix : eighteen major cases
  • Targeted transparency in the United States
  • Targeted transparency in the international context.