The traditional approach to transparency is focused exclusively on the amount of information provided to any third party. Instru-ments for public access to information generally fall into one of the two categories: proactive and demand-driven. Proactive dissem-ination refers to information that the government makes public about its activities and performance. Demanddriven access refers to an institutional commitment to respond to citizens’ requests for specific kinds of information or documents which otherwise would not be accessible. Both the dissemination of information and institutional answerability form the concept of transparency. Here is where the accountability goes into action: the formal communi-cation from a public institution or mutual agreements gives rise to duties and rights which include the capability to sanction, compen-sate, and/or remediate (Fox, 2007). Then, accountability includes the responsibility of taking a political measure or making an agree-ment.