The traditional approach to transparency is focused exclusivelyon the amount of information provided to any third party. Instru-ments for public access to information generally fall into one of thetwo categories: proactive and demand-driven. Proactive dissem-ination refers to information that the government makes publicabout its activities and performance. Demand-driven access refersto an institutional commitment to respond to citizens’ requests forspecific kinds of information or documents which otherwise wouldnot be accessible. Both the dissemination of information and insti-tutional answerability form the concept of transparency. Here iswhere the accountability goes into action: the formal communi-cation from a public institution or mutual agreements gives rise toduties and rights which include the capability to sanction, compen-sate, and/or remediate (Fox, 2007). Then, accountability includesthe responsibility of taking a political measure or making an agree-ment.