Freedom of Information/Exemptions

Freedom of information laws generally start out with a class of documents (e.g. all official documents of government agencies) and then allows exemptions from this class. This page sets out the exemptions and refers to the implementation of those exemptions in various jurisdictions.

Comparison across jurisdictions
Where the table below refers to a legislative provision without specifying an Act, presume it refers to that jurisdiction's FOI Act or equivalent.

Museum artefacts &c
This exemption was intended 'to ensure that private collections of papers deposited with these institutions are not available' (EM, FOI Bill 1978, 7 [27]).

But note that an agency cannot avoid the FOI Act by depositing its papers with a museum/Archives/etc: EM, FOI Bill 1978, 7 [29]

Deliberative processes/working papers
'[The exemption] is based on the view, as expressed the United States Supreme Court, that the frank discussion of legal and policy matters in writing might be inhibited if the discussion were made public and 'that human experience teaches that those who expect public dissemination of their remarks may well temper candour with a concern of appearance ..... to the detriment of the decision-making processes'.': EM, FOI Bill 1978, 20 [100]

'[A]mongst the wide class of [internal working papers], there will be many documents that can be made public without harm to the public interest, whether because they are documents of a routine or predominantly factual character or because the information contained in them has already been made public.': EM, FOI Bill 1978, 21 [103].