Enhancing access to health information in Tanzania: legal frameworks, university libraries’ pivotal role, and evidence-based policy reforms
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2025-11-07
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The sub Saharan Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (SJSSH)
Abstract
Access to health information is a cornerstone of democratic governance, transparency, accountability, and optimal public health outcomes. Anchored in Article 18 of Tanzania’s 1977 Constitution and the Access to Information Act of 2016, this right intersects with global [e.g., International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) Article 19] and regional [e.g., African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) Article 9] instruments. Employing doctrinal legal
research, this article analyzes these frameworks while positioning university libraries as critical intermediaries for acquiring, organizing, and disseminating health information to academic and societal users. Key findings reveal substantive barriers; broad exemptions, excessive discretionary powers, and fragile enforcement; compounded by procedural gaps in digital regulation and oversight. University libraries empower users through information literacy, digital repositories, and
community outreach, yet face resource constraints and infrastructural challenges. The study concludes that aligning legal entitlements with practical access requires systemic reforms to advance health equity and sustainable development. Policy recommendations include narrowing exemptions with public-interest overrides, establishing an independent Information Commission, introducing tiered sanctions and expedited urgent requests, and fostering library-government partnerships for capacity-building and digital integration.
Description
Journal Article
Keywords
Access-Health Information, University Libraries, Right-Information, Public Health Governance, Information Policy Reform