Opening Government Data: Federal Register Goes XML

Great news today on the open-access (OA) front with the federal government’s announcement that the Federal Register, the daily compilation of proposed and final regulations to be issued by federal agencies, will now be available in XML format. (Want to see a sample? Here is today’s issue as an XML document.) This is great news for a number of reasons, among them:

  • It’s canonical, complete, and up-to-date, coming as it does directly from the FR publisher. This solves a number of problems with private actors’ efforts to provide open access to primary legal source materials, as necessary and valuable as those efforts continue to be (particularly for the great bulk of the iceberg “below the waterline”—to wit, the two centuries of government data predating the digital era, published only in paper form). Pagination of the original source is also preserved to aid pinpoint citation.
  • It standardizes regulatory OA policy across the entire Executive Branch. No more agency-by-agency variation in the ease of finding proposed regs online. (Memo to the judicial branch: time for the lower federal courts to catch up to what the Supreme Court is already doing in OA archiving!)

More available at my old hometown rag and at BoingBoing.

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