De la simulación en el informe de gobierno hacia una transparencia normativa efectiva en México en más de 100 años de la Constitución Política Mexi-cana

For more than 100 years, two normative practices have been present in Mexico that have governed government transparency, both obeying the sociopolitical logic and legal designs of the moment. On the one hand, we have a practice that dates back to the nineteenth century and was formalized in the twen...

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Autor principal: Sánchez Gayosso, Ramiro Daniel
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Castellano
Publicado: 2022
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Acceso en línea:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=8088903
Fuente:Estudios en derecho a la información, ISSN 2683-2038, Nº. 13 (enero-junio 2022), 2022153 pags.
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Sumario: For more than 100 years, two normative practices have been present in Mexico that have governed government transparency, both obeying the sociopolitical logic and legal designs of the moment. On the one hand, we have a practice that dates back to the nineteenth century and was formalized in the twentieth century with the 1917 constitution: the government report. On the other hand, we find another set of legal and institutional provisions at the beginning of the 21st century: the laws and institutions on government transparency. Due to this, the question that arises is what has been the process of transparency in Mexico from the constitutional framework during the 20th and 21st centuries? The objective of this article is to present the progress that has taken place in terms of government transparency to move from a simulation present in government reports to an effective opening of information materialized in laws and institutions that have made progress in specific dimensions of accountability in Mexico, this from a regulatory point of view.