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Midterm Reviews: Tracking Progress of Four-Year Action Plans

In 2022, the OGP Steering Committee introduced the option for countries to develop four-year action plans, giving them a longer timeframe to tackle ambitious reforms that need more time to take root.

In 2023 and 2024, 15 countries produced four-year action plans, representing a third of all national OGP action plans submitted in those two years:

Africa and the Middle East Americas Asia and the Pacific Europe
Ghana Brazil Mongolia Finland
Kenya Chile Philippines Netherlands
Morocco Costa Rica Republic of Korea Norway
Sierra Leone Portugal
Serbia

What’s in the Four-Year Action Plans?

The Independent Reporting Mechanism (IRM) has noted similar levels of ambition of these four-year action plans compared to two-year action plans. Notably, some of the most ambitious commitments aim to mainstream open government reforms and pass legislation.

  • Kenya has committed to pursue full implementation of the Access to Information Law.
  • Mongolia has committed to pass the Extractive Industries Transparency Bill.
  • Norway is making more data available on public procurement and creating a framework for managing such data centrally.
  • Brazil will deliver clear national policies and guidelines to advance transparency in scientific research.

Several countries have aligned their commitments that support national strategies. This includes:

  • Finland’s second four-year action plan is based on an open government strategy developed during the first one.
  • Costa Rica’s action plan includes commitments to expand its national employment strategy and expand the crime prevention program “Sembremos Seguridad.”
  • The Philippines’ commitments were largely prioritized based on relevance to the Philippine Development Plan, while developing an open government strategy outside the OGP action plan process.

In addition, the development of several four-year action plans involved a wider range of actors (civil society, government agencies, private sector, academia, and others), compared to previous two-year action plans.

  • The Republic of Korea expanded its multi-stakeholder forum to include academic and private sector representatives, while in Mongolia the National Committee for Human Rights reactivated the multi-stakeholder forum and proactively published information on the national OGP website regarding co-creation.
  • Stakeholders in the Netherlands used a manifesto from the “Talking About Information” coalition, with members from the private sector, civil society, academia, and the government, as a framework for jointly developing OGP commitments.
  • Chile, Costa Rica, and Kenya’s four-year action plans cover the executive, judiciary, and legislature. In fact, eight of the 15 action plans continued to pursue Open Parliament commitments.

Midterm Reviews: A New IRM Product for Four-Year Action Plans

OGP requires four-year action plan cycles to include a refresh process to allow countries to update their plans following the first two years of implementation. As a result of this refresh process, countries may update, modify, or add new commitments that address current realities and needs or support the implementation of other commitments.

The IRM has introduced a new product to evaluate this refresh process—the Midterm Review. This evaluates any refreshed or new commitments and will provide a general update on implementation progress.
The first Midterm Review, covering the refresh of Latvia’s 2021-2025 action plan, has already been published, and another for Jordan’s 2021-2025 action plan will be published in 2025. Moving forward, the IRM will conduct Midterm Reviews for all four-year action plans submitted.

Find out more about this new product at https://www.opengovpartnership.org/irm.

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