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A Culture of Secrecy: The Government Versus the People's Right to Know
 
 
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A Culture of Secrecy: The Government Versus the People's Right to Know [Hardcover]

Athan G. Theoharis (Editor)

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Book Description

April 1998
#The government is hiding information from its citizens--or so most Americans believe. While even some members of Congress now call for greater access to classified documents, federal agencies continue to withhold a massive amount of information in the name of national security, maintaining a culture of secrecy rooted in the Cold War.

This new book examines who in government is hiding what from the rest of us, how they're doing it, and why it should matter to all of us. Contributing scholars, journalists, and attorneys survey the policies of federal intelligence agencies and presidents--notably Nixon, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton--to keep information secret. They show how these agencies have gone far beyond legitimate security needs to withhold information, and they describe the frustrations and costs encountered in their own efforts to obtain classified information.

The authors review important cases exemplifying State Department, agency, and presidential efforts to withhold, destroy, or delay release of these records. In chapters centering on the Kennedy assassination, the Nixon tapes, and the FBI's files on John Lennon and the Supreme Court justices, readers will find an abundance of startling and disturbing revelations. By citing some of the methods used by agencies like the CIA, NSA, NSC, and FBI to circumvent the Freedom of Information Act--often with the cooperation of the judicial system--these essays clearly show that abuses of secrecy aren't limited to the withholding of information but extend to the absurd lengths taken to avoid disclosure.

A Culture of Secrecy is particularly timely reading for a concerned public. Its cases will instruct others seeking access to classified material, and its exposure of government practices may lead to greater openness that will facilitate historical research and guarantee the public's right to know.


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

In nine chapters edited by Theoharis (J. Edgar Hoover, Sex & Crime, LJ 2/1/95), ten scholars, journalists, and attorneys explore the ways that democratic government is undermined by the inclination to secrecy of presidents, bureaucrats, legislators, and judges. As Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-NY) has stated, Americans have been placed in the ironic position of relying on Soviet archives in Moscow to unravel American history during the Cold War. The contributors describe the imperial presidency from Franklin Roosevelt through Bill Clinton, with emphasis on the FBI, CIA, NSA, Department of State, and National Security Council. Included are John Lennon's FBI files, J. Edgar Hoover's Supreme Court files, files on the Kennedy assassination, and the Nixon tapes. One need not be Oliver Stone to conclude from these stories that the federal government's cult of secrecy has overstepped legitimate national security needs to contribute to the imperial presidency at the expense of democratic government. Recommended for academic collections.?William D. Pederson, Louisiana State Univ., Shreveport
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Back Cover

"A provocative volume that delivers a cautionary shot across the bow for journalists, scholars, and every citizen dedicated to responsible government. It brings into sharp focus the current bureaucratic wars pitting the public's right to know against government spinmasters who hide and warp the truth by overclassifying documents that rightfully belong to the people."--Seymour M. Hersh, author of The Dark Side of Camelot

"This is the best file ever assembled about our government's unconscionable attempts to keep its secrets from the people. The so-called intelligence community has been insulting the rest of us for decades. The documentation is all here. Now it's up to the rest of us to do something about it."--Victor Navasky, publisher and editorial director, The Nation

"Fills a huge gap in America's understanding of how the Freedom of Information Act actually works (or doesn't). Scholars have long needed such a volume, while general readers will be scandalized by its revelations."--John Prados, author of Presidents' Secret Wars

"A major work exposing the gatekeepers of America's Secret History, and an important resource for those still searching for the truth."--Oliver Stone


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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
presidential records act, signals intelligence, records review board, human radiation experiments, declassification program, responsive records, withholding claims, national security exemption, automatic declassification, national security claims, sensitive records, operational files, presidential records
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
White House, State Department, Supreme Court, United States, National Archives, Advisory Committee, New York Times, Washington Post, Athan Theoharis, Justice Department, World War, Public Law, The War, Communist Party, Judge Richey, National Security Agency, Historical Diplomatic Documentation, Edgar Hoover, Abe Fortas, John Lennon, Foreign Relations, Department of State, President Clinton, Secret Service, Government Printing Office
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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