ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Heather Brooke - Journalist
Heather Brooke campaigns for freedom of information, requesting one secret document at a time.

Why you should listen

Heather Brooke is a freelance journalist, freedom of information campaigner and professor of journalism at City University London. In 2005, she filed one of the very first requests under the UK's Freedom of Information Act, asking to see the expense reports of Members of Parliament. The request was blocked, modified and refiled, and blocked again...but the years-long quest to view expense documents, and the subsequent investigation, led to 2009's parliamentary expenses scandal. The scandal led to the first forced resignation of the Speaker of the House in 300 years.

Brooke worked as a political and crime reporter in the US before moving to Britain, where she writes for the national papers. She has published three books: Your Right to KnowThe Silent State, and 2011's The Revolution Will Be Digitised. It was while researching her latest book that she obtained a leak from Wikileaks of the full batch of 251,287 US diplomatic cables and worked with The Guardian newspaper on an investigation.

More profile about the speaker
Heather Brooke | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2012

Heather Brooke: My battle to expose government corruption

Filmed:
997,335 views

Our leaders need to be held accountable, says journalist Heather Brooke. And she should know: Brooke uncovered the British Parliamentary financial expenses that led to a major political scandal in 2009. She urges us to ask our leaders questions through platforms like Freedom of Information requests -- and to finally get some answers.
- Journalist
Heather Brooke campaigns for freedom of information, requesting one secret document at a time. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:16
Once upon a time, the world was a big, dysfunctional family.
0
732
5169
00:21
It was run by the great and powerful parents,
1
5901
3431
00:25
and the people were helpless
2
9332
2335
00:27
and hopeless naughty children.
3
11667
2496
00:30
If any of the more rowdier children questioned
4
14163
2503
00:32
the authority of the parents, they were scolded.
5
16666
3577
00:36
If they went exploring into the parents' rooms,
6
20243
3033
00:39
or even into the secret filing cabinets, they were punished,
7
23276
3783
00:42
and told that for their own good
8
27059
2753
00:45
they must never go in there again.
9
29812
3631
00:49
Then one day, a man came to town
10
33443
2496
00:51
with boxes and boxes of secret documents
11
35939
2798
00:54
stolen from the parents' rooms.
12
38737
1864
00:56
"Look what they've been hiding from you," he said.
13
40601
4026
01:00
The children looked and were amazed.
14
44627
3042
01:03
There were maps and minutes from meetings
15
47669
2844
01:06
where the parents were slagging each other off.
16
50513
3265
01:09
They behaved just like the children.
17
53778
2548
01:12
And they made mistakes, too, just like the children.
18
56326
3958
01:16
The only difference was, their mistakes
19
60284
2711
01:18
were in the secret filing cabinets.
20
62995
2825
01:21
Well, there was a girl in the town, and she didn't think
21
65820
2805
01:24
they should be in the secret filing cabinets,
22
68625
2867
01:27
or if they were, there ought to be a law
23
71492
1900
01:29
to allow the children access.
24
73392
2117
01:31
And so she set about to make it so.
25
75509
3807
01:35
Well, I'm the girl in that story, and the secret documents
26
79316
3846
01:39
that I was interested in were located in this building,
27
83162
3154
01:42
the British Parliament, and the data that I wanted
28
86316
4362
01:46
to get my hands on were the expense receipts
29
90678
2661
01:49
of members of Parliament.
30
93339
3889
01:53
I thought this was a basic question to ask in a democracy. (Applause)
31
97228
6239
01:59
It wasn't like I was asking for the code to a nuclear bunker,
32
103467
2907
02:02
or anything like that, but the amount of resistance I got
33
106374
2853
02:05
from this Freedom of Information request,
34
109227
2523
02:07
you would have thought I'd asked something like this.
35
111750
3244
02:10
So I fought for about five years doing this,
36
114994
4225
02:15
and it was one of many hundreds of requests that I made,
37
119219
3472
02:18
not -- I didn't -- Hey, look, I didn't set out, honestly,
38
122691
2953
02:21
to revolutionize the British Parliament.
39
125644
1649
02:23
That was not my intention. I was just making these requests
40
127293
3431
02:26
as part of research for my first book.
41
130724
3151
02:29
But it ended up in this very long, protracted legal battle
42
133875
2865
02:32
and there I was after five years fighting against Parliament
43
136740
4375
02:37
in front of three of Britain's most eminent High Court judges
44
141115
3040
02:40
waiting for their ruling about whether or not Parliament had to release this data.
45
144155
4152
02:44
And I've got to tell you, I wasn't that hopeful,
46
148307
2108
02:46
because I'd seen the establishment. I thought,
47
150415
2725
02:49
it always sticks together. I am out of luck.
48
153140
3356
02:52
Well, guess what? I won. Hooray. (Applause)
49
156496
4586
02:56
Well, that's not exactly the story, because the problem was
50
161082
3423
03:00
that Parliament delayed and delayed releasing that data,
51
164505
3354
03:03
and then they tried to retrospectively change the law
52
167859
3160
03:06
so that it would no longer apply to them.
53
171019
2673
03:09
The transparency law they'd passed earlier that applied to everybody else,
54
173692
2922
03:12
they tried to keep it so it didn't apply to them.
55
176614
2796
03:15
What they hadn't counted on was digitization,
56
179410
3495
03:18
because that meant that all those paper receipts
57
182905
2386
03:21
had been scanned in electronically, and it was very easy
58
185291
3240
03:24
for somebody to just copy that entire database,
59
188531
3199
03:27
put it on a disk, and then just saunter outside of Parliament,
60
191730
3934
03:31
which they did, and then they shopped that disk
61
195664
2485
03:34
to the highest bidder, which was the Daily Telegraph,
62
198149
2958
03:37
and then, you all remember, there was weeks and weeks
63
201107
3207
03:40
of revelations, everything from porn movies
64
204314
3025
03:43
and bath plugs and new kitchens
65
207339
3156
03:46
and mortgages that had never been paid off.
66
210495
3461
03:49
The end result was six ministers resigned,
67
213956
4687
03:54
the first speaker of the house in 300 years was forced to resign,
68
218643
4051
03:58
a new government was elected on a mandate of transparency,
69
222694
4019
04:02
120 MPs stepped down at that election,
70
226713
3783
04:06
and so far, four MPs and two lords
71
230496
4491
04:10
have done jail time for fraud.
72
234987
3030
04:13
So, thank you. (Applause)
73
238017
6378
04:20
Well, I tell you that story because it wasn't unique to Britain.
74
244395
4275
04:24
It was an example of a culture clash that's happening
75
248670
3341
04:27
all over the world between bewigged and bestockinged
76
252011
3320
04:31
officials who think that they can rule over us
77
255331
4104
04:35
without very much prying from the public,
78
259435
1908
04:37
and then suddenly confronted with a public
79
261343
2453
04:39
who is no longer content with that arrangement,
80
263796
3438
04:43
and not only not content with it, now, more often,
81
267234
3238
04:46
armed with official data itself.
82
270472
4374
04:50
So we are moving to this democratization of information,
83
274846
5138
04:55
and I've been in this field for quite a while.
84
279984
2647
04:58
Slightly embarrassing admission: Even when I was a kid,
85
282631
2641
05:01
I used to have these little spy books, and I would, like,
86
285272
1935
05:03
see what everybody was doing in my neighborhood and log it down.
87
287207
2626
05:05
I think that was a pretty good indication
88
289833
2206
05:07
about my future career as an investigative journalist,
89
292039
3081
05:11
and what I've seen from being in this access to information field for so long
90
295120
4520
05:15
is that it used to be quite a niche interest,
91
299640
2776
05:18
and it's gone mainstream. Everybody, increasingly, around the world,
92
302416
3151
05:21
wants to know about what people in power are doing.
93
305567
3168
05:24
They want a say in decisions that are made in their name
94
308735
3408
05:28
and with their money. It's this democratization of information
95
312143
3023
05:31
that I think is an information enlightenment,
96
315166
2706
05:33
and it has many of the same principles of the first Enlightenment.
97
317872
3463
05:37
It's about searching for the truth,
98
321335
2995
05:40
not because somebody says it's true, "because I say so."
99
324330
4197
05:44
No, it's about trying to find the truth based on
100
328527
2474
05:46
what you can see and what can be tested.
101
331001
2629
05:49
That, in the first Enlightenment, led to questions about
102
333630
2668
05:52
the right of kings, the divine right of kings to rule over people,
103
336298
3509
05:55
or that women should be subordinate to men,
104
339807
2177
05:57
or that the Church was the official word of God.
105
341984
2703
06:00
Obviously the Church weren't very happy about this,
106
344687
2436
06:03
and they tried to suppress it,
107
347123
2101
06:05
but what they hadn't counted on was technology,
108
349224
3071
06:08
and then they had the printing press, which suddenly
109
352295
2425
06:10
enabled these ideas to spread cheaply, far and fast,
110
354720
3392
06:14
and people would come together in coffee houses,
111
358112
2840
06:16
discuss the ideas, plot revolution.
112
360952
2816
06:19
In our day, we have digitization. That strips all the physical mass out of information,
113
363768
4591
06:24
so now it's almost zero cost to copy and share information.
114
368359
3405
06:27
Our printing press is the Internet. Our coffee houses are social networks.
115
371764
4237
06:31
We're moving to what I would think of as a fully connected system,
116
376001
5102
06:37
and we have global decisions to make in this system,
117
381103
2873
06:39
decisions about climate, about finance systems,
118
383976
3686
06:43
about resources. And think about it --
119
387662
3341
06:46
if we want to make an important decision about buying a house,
120
391003
2462
06:49
we don't just go off. I mean, I don't know about you,
121
393465
2514
06:51
but I want to see a lot of houses before I put that much money into it.
122
395979
3344
06:55
And if we're thinking about a finance system,
123
399323
2355
06:57
we need a lot of information to take in. It's just not possible
124
401678
3644
07:01
for one person to take in the amount, the volume
125
405322
3961
07:05
of information, and analyze it to make good decisions.
126
409283
3766
07:08
So that's why we're seeing increasingly this demand
127
413049
3026
07:11
for access to information.
128
416075
2385
07:14
That's why we're starting to see more disclosure laws
129
418460
2309
07:16
come out, so for example, on the environment,
130
420769
1976
07:18
there's the Aarhus Convention,
131
422745
1716
07:20
which is a European directive that gives people
132
424461
2028
07:22
a very strong right to know, so if your water company
133
426489
2748
07:25
is dumping water into your river, sewage water
134
429237
3370
07:28
into your river, you have a right to know about it.
135
432607
3048
07:31
In the finance industry, you now have more of a right
136
435655
3879
07:35
to know about what's going on, so we have
137
439534
2553
07:37
different anti-bribery laws, money regulations,
138
442087
2953
07:40
increased corporate disclosure, so you can now track assets across borders.
139
445040
4073
07:45
And it's getting harder to hide assets, tax avoidance,
140
449113
5244
07:50
pay inequality. So that's great. We're starting to find out
141
454357
3135
07:53
more and more about these systems.
142
457492
2719
07:56
And they're all moving to this central system,
143
460211
2792
07:58
this fully connected system,
144
463003
2367
08:01
all of them except one. Can you guess which one?
145
465370
3207
08:04
It's the system which underpins all these other systems.
146
468577
2671
08:07
It's the system by which we organize and exercise power,
147
471248
4158
08:11
and there I'm talking about politics, because in politics,
148
475406
2930
08:14
we're back to this system, this top-down hierarchy.
149
478336
4127
08:18
And how is it possible that the volume of information
150
482463
3081
08:21
can be processed that needs to in this system?
151
485544
2811
08:24
Well, it just can't. That's it.
152
488355
2616
08:26
And I think this is largely what's behind the crisis
153
490971
2707
08:29
of legitimacy in our different governments right now.
154
493678
4323
08:33
So I've told you a bit about what I did
155
498001
2183
08:36
to try and drag Parliament, kicking and screaming,
156
500184
2685
08:38
into the 21st century, and I'm just going to give you
157
502869
2515
08:41
a couple of examples of what a few other people I know
158
505384
2664
08:43
are doing.
159
508048
1220
08:45
So this is a guy called Seb Bacon. He's a computer
160
509268
3219
08:48
programmer, and he built a site called Alaveteli,
161
512487
3958
08:52
and what it is, it's a Freedom of Information platform.
162
516445
4770
08:57
It's open-source, with documentation, and it allows you
163
521215
2975
09:00
to make a Freedom of Information request,
164
524190
3103
09:03
to ask your public body a question, so
165
527293
2969
09:06
it takes all the hassle out of it, and I can tell you
166
530262
3120
09:09
that there is a lot of hassle making these requests,
167
533382
2088
09:11
so it takes all of that hassle out, and you just type in your question,
168
535470
3544
09:14
for example, how many police officers have a criminal record?
169
539014
4471
09:19
It zooms it off to the appropriate person, it tells you
170
543485
3841
09:23
when the time limit is coming to an end, it keeps track of all
171
547326
3488
09:26
the correspondence, it posts it up there,
172
550814
1652
09:28
and it becomes an archive of public knowledge.
173
552466
3655
09:32
So that's open-source and it can be used in any country
174
556121
3573
09:35
where there is some kind of Freedom of Information law.
175
559694
2911
09:38
So there's a list there of the different countries that have it,
176
562605
3210
09:41
and then there's a few more coming on board.
177
565815
1795
09:43
So if any of you out there like the sound of that
178
567610
2560
09:46
and have a law like that in your country,
179
570170
2733
09:48
I know that Seb would love to hear from you
180
572903
2039
09:50
about collaborating and getting that into your country.
181
574942
4072
09:54
This is Birgitta Jónsdóttir. She's an Icelandic MP.
182
579014
4295
09:59
And quite an unusual MP. In Iceland, she was
183
583309
3834
10:03
one of the protesters who was outside of Parliament
184
587143
3317
10:06
when the country's economy collapsed,
185
590460
3746
10:10
and then she was elected on a reform mandate,
186
594206
3894
10:14
and she's now spearheading this project.
187
598100
2367
10:16
It's the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative,
188
600467
2887
10:19
and they've just got funding to make it an international
189
603354
2265
10:21
modern media project, and this is taking all of the best laws
190
605619
3439
10:24
around the world about freedom of expression,
191
609058
2936
10:27
protection of whistleblowers, protection from libel,
192
611994
2795
10:30
source protection, and trying to make Iceland a publishing haven.
193
614789
4474
10:35
It's a place where your data can be free, so when we think
194
619263
2421
10:37
about, increasingly, how governments want to access user data,
195
621684
3415
10:40
what they're trying to do in Iceland is make this safe haven
196
625099
2772
10:43
where it can happen.
197
627871
2737
10:46
In my own field of investigative journalism, we're also
198
630608
3138
10:49
having to start thinking globally, so this is a site called
199
633746
2830
10:52
Investigative Dashboard. And if you're trying to track
200
636576
3123
10:55
a dictator's assets, for example, Hosni Mubarak,
201
639699
2983
10:58
you know, he's just funneling out cash from his country
202
642682
3445
11:02
when he knows he's in trouble, and what you want to do
203
646127
2539
11:04
to investigate that is, you need to have access to
204
648666
2396
11:06
all of the world's, as many as you can,
205
651062
2299
11:09
companies' house registrations databases.
206
653361
2783
11:12
So this is a website that tries to agglomerate all of those
207
656144
4438
11:16
databases into one place so you can start searching for,
208
660582
3255
11:19
you know, his relatives, his friends, the head of his security services.
209
663837
3668
11:23
You can try and find out how he's moving out assets
210
667505
2751
11:26
from that country.
211
670256
2726
11:28
But again, when it comes to the decisions which are
212
672982
3633
11:32
impacting us the most, perhaps, the most important
213
676615
3000
11:35
decisions that are being made about war and so forth,
214
679615
3289
11:38
again we can't just make a Freedom of Information request.
215
682904
2929
11:41
It's really difficult. So we're still having to rely on
216
685833
3108
11:44
illegitimate ways of getting information, through leaks.
217
688941
4082
11:48
So when the Guardian did this investigation about
218
693023
3042
11:51
the Afghan War, you know, they can't walk into
219
696065
3150
11:55
the Department of Defense and ask for all the information.
220
699215
3464
11:58
You know, they're just not going to get it.
221
702679
1942
12:00
So this came from leaks of tens of thousands of dispatches
222
704621
3540
12:04
that were written by American soldiers
223
708161
2406
12:06
about the Afghan War, and leaked,
224
710567
2559
12:09
and then they're able to do this investigation.
225
713126
3651
12:12
Another rather large investigation is around world diplomacy.
226
716777
5568
12:18
Again, this is all based around leaks,
227
722345
2500
12:20
251,000 U.S. diplomatic cables, and I was involved
228
724845
5251
12:25
in this investigation because I got this leak
229
730096
3941
12:29
through a leak from a disgruntled WikiLeaker
230
734037
3369
12:33
and ended up going to work at the Guardian.
231
737406
2769
12:36
So I can tell you firsthand what it was like to have access
232
740175
2424
12:38
to this leak. It was amazing. I mean, it was amazing.
233
742599
1967
12:40
It reminded me of that scene in "The Wizard of Oz."
234
744566
3650
12:44
Do you know the one I mean? Where the little dog Toto
235
748216
2488
12:46
runs across to where the wizard [is], and he pulls back,
236
750704
2851
12:49
the dog's pulling back the curtain, and --
237
753555
1462
12:50
"Don't look behind the screen. Don't look at the man behind the screen."
238
755017
3983
12:54
It was just like that, because what you started to see
239
759000
2136
12:57
is that all of these grand statesmen, these very pompous
240
761136
2951
12:59
politicians, they were just like us.
241
764087
3098
13:03
They all bitched about each other. I mean, quite gossipy,
242
767185
2560
13:05
those cables. Okay, but I thought it was a very important
243
769745
2671
13:08
point for all of us to grasp, these are human beings
244
772416
2601
13:10
just like us. They don't have special powers.
245
775017
1951
13:12
They're not magic. They are not our parents.
246
776968
3823
13:16
Beyond that, what I found most fascinating
247
780791
4849
13:21
was the level of endemic corruption that I saw
248
785640
2624
13:24
across all different countries, and particularly centered
249
788264
3155
13:27
around the heart of power, around public officials
250
791419
2828
13:30
who were embezzling the public's money
251
794247
2616
13:32
for their own personal enrichment, and allowed to do that
252
796863
3018
13:35
because of official secrecy.
253
799881
3383
13:39
So I've mentioned WikiLeaks, because surely what could be
254
803264
3627
13:42
more open than publishing all the material?
255
806891
2831
13:45
Because that is what Julian Assange did.
256
809722
3071
13:48
He wasn't content with the way the newspapers published it
257
812793
2568
13:51
to be safe and legal. He threw it all out there.
258
815361
3797
13:55
That did end up with vulnerable people in Afghanistan
259
819158
3715
13:58
being exposed. It also meant that the Belarussian dictator
260
822873
3416
14:02
was given a handy list of all the pro-democracy campaigners
261
826289
3770
14:05
in that country who had spoken to the U.S. government.
262
830059
3486
14:09
Is that radical openness? I say it's not, because for me,
263
833545
4472
14:13
what it means, it doesn't mean abdicating power,
264
838017
3502
14:17
responsibility, accountability, it's actually being a partner
265
841519
3754
14:21
with power. It's about sharing responsibility,
266
845273
3016
14:24
sharing accountability. Also, the fact that
267
848289
2912
14:27
he threatened to sue me because I got a leak of his leaks,
268
851201
2137
14:29
I thought that showed a remarkable sort of inconsistency
269
853338
2685
14:31
in ideology, to be honest, as well. (Laughs)
270
856023
5841
14:37
The other thing is that power is incredibly seductive,
271
861864
3334
14:41
and you must have two real qualities, I think,
272
865198
2668
14:43
when you come to the table, when you're dealing
273
867866
2413
14:46
with power, talking about power,
274
870279
1734
14:47
because of its seductive capacity.
275
872013
2373
14:50
You've got to have skepticism and humility.
276
874386
3019
14:53
Skepticism, because you must always be challenging.
277
877405
2593
14:55
I want to see why do you -- you just say so? That's not good enough.
278
879998
3032
14:58
I want to see the evidence behind why that's so.
279
883030
2715
15:01
And humility because we are all human. We all make mistakes.
280
885745
4493
15:06
And if you don't have skepticism and humility,
281
890238
2792
15:08
then it's a really short journey to go from reformer
282
893030
3095
15:12
to autocrat, and I think you only have to read "Animal Farm"
283
896125
4609
15:16
to get that message about how power corrupts people.
284
900734
5943
15:22
So what is the solution? It is, I believe, to embody
285
906677
5468
15:28
within the rule of law rights to information.
286
912145
3467
15:31
At the moment our rights are incredibly weak.
287
915612
2635
15:34
In a lot of countries, we have Official Secrets Acts,
288
918247
2982
15:37
including in Britain here. We have an Official Secrets Act
289
921229
2163
15:39
with no public interest test. So that means it's a crime,
290
923392
3116
15:42
people are punished, quite severely in a lot of cases,
291
926508
4166
15:46
for publishing or giving away official information.
292
930674
4203
15:50
Now wouldn't it be amazing, and really, this is what I want
293
934877
3478
15:54
all of you to think about, if we had an Official Disclosure Act
294
938355
3562
15:57
where officials were punished if they were found
295
941917
3376
16:01
to have suppressed or hidden information
296
945293
2960
16:04
that was in the public interest?
297
948253
2185
16:06
So that -- yes. Yes! My power pose. (Applause) (Laughs)
298
950438
6900
16:13
I would like us to work towards that.
299
957338
2545
16:15
So it's not all bad news. I mean, there definitely is
300
959883
3920
16:19
progress on the line, but I think what we find is that
301
963803
2955
16:22
the closer that we get right into the heart of power,
302
966758
3176
16:25
the more opaque, closed it becomes.
303
969934
4424
16:30
So it was only just the other week that I heard London's
304
974358
3080
16:33
Metropolitan Police Commissioner talking about why
305
977438
3497
16:36
the police need access to all of our communications,
306
980935
4592
16:41
spying on us without any judicial oversight,
307
985527
3063
16:44
and he said it was a matter of life and death.
308
988590
1666
16:46
He actually said that, it was a matter of life and death.
309
990256
3247
16:49
There was no evidence. He presented no evidence of that.
310
993503
4222
16:53
It was just, "Because I say so.
311
997725
3122
16:56
You have to trust me. Take it on faith."
312
1000847
3248
16:59
Well, I'm sorry, people, but we are back
313
1004095
1999
17:01
to the pre-Enlightenment Church,
314
1006094
3705
17:05
and we need to fight against that.
315
1009799
3776
17:09
So he was talking about the law in Britain which is
316
1013575
3288
17:12
the Communications Data Bill, an absolutely outrageous piece of legislation.
317
1016863
4226
17:16
In America, you have the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act.
318
1021089
3606
17:20
You've got drones now being considered for domestic surveillance.
319
1024695
3640
17:24
You have the National Security Agency building
320
1028335
2760
17:26
the world's giantest spy center. It's just this colossal --
321
1031095
3528
17:30
it's five times bigger than the U.S. Capitol,
322
1034623
2472
17:32
in which they're going to intercept and analyze
323
1037095
1802
17:34
communications, traffic and personal data
324
1038897
2949
17:37
to try and figure out who's the troublemaker in society.
325
1041846
3313
17:41
Well, to go back to our original story, the parents
326
1045159
4800
17:45
have panicked. They've locked all the doors.
327
1049959
3850
17:49
They've kidded out the house with CCTV cameras.
328
1053809
3086
17:52
They're watching all of us. They've dug a basement,
329
1056895
2752
17:55
and they've built a spy center to try and run algorithms
330
1059647
2664
17:58
and figure out which ones of us are troublesome,
331
1062311
2672
18:00
and if any of us complain about that, we're arrested for terrorism.
332
1064983
4234
18:05
Well, is that a fairy tale or a living nightmare?
333
1069217
3574
18:08
Some fairy tales have happy endings. Some don't.
334
1072791
3659
18:12
I think we've all read the Grimms' fairy tales, which are,
335
1076450
2747
18:15
indeed, very grim.
336
1079197
2498
18:17
But the world isn't a fairy tale, and it could be more brutal
337
1081695
5222
18:22
than we want to acknowledge.
338
1086917
2804
18:25
Equally, it could be better than we've been led to believe,
339
1089721
2289
18:27
but either way, we have to start seeing it exactly as it is,
340
1092010
3711
18:31
with all of its problems, because it's only by seeing it
341
1095721
3849
18:35
with all of its problems that we'll be able to fix them
342
1099570
2493
18:37
and live in a world in which we can all be
343
1102063
4071
18:42
happily ever after. (Laughs) Thank you very much.
344
1106134
3686
18:45
(Applause)
345
1109820
3235
18:48
Thank you. (Applause)
346
1113055
4055
Translated by Joseph Geni
Reviewed by Morton Bast

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Heather Brooke - Journalist
Heather Brooke campaigns for freedom of information, requesting one secret document at a time.

Why you should listen

Heather Brooke is a freelance journalist, freedom of information campaigner and professor of journalism at City University London. In 2005, she filed one of the very first requests under the UK's Freedom of Information Act, asking to see the expense reports of Members of Parliament. The request was blocked, modified and refiled, and blocked again...but the years-long quest to view expense documents, and the subsequent investigation, led to 2009's parliamentary expenses scandal. The scandal led to the first forced resignation of the Speaker of the House in 300 years.

Brooke worked as a political and crime reporter in the US before moving to Britain, where she writes for the national papers. She has published three books: Your Right to KnowThe Silent State, and 2011's The Revolution Will Be Digitised. It was while researching her latest book that she obtained a leak from Wikileaks of the full batch of 251,287 US diplomatic cables and worked with The Guardian newspaper on an investigation.

More profile about the speaker
Heather Brooke | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee