"Transparency means helping people to see into systems and understand why decisions are taken" (Osborne, 2004, p. 292). In other words, transparency refers to a quality of openness and candor. The confidentiality is defined as "an action in equity to restrain a person who has received valuable or sensitive information in confidence from disclosing or making use of that information" (Lambert, 2003, p1). It means that manager must be asked to treat the information as confidential or it must be obvious that information is given in confidence. Transparency is one of those concepts that everyone should be in favor of. However, in real life, it 's not that simple. Manager should know, there are limits to what you can disclose to the team. Total openness can lead to total chaos. This is the major dilemma for manager whether to be transparent or maintain confidentiality.
It is agreeable that there are some situations that should not be immediately disclosed to an organization. The question is how one can decide what falls into this category? There is no doubt that transparency is
References: Brown, G. (2001, December 1). Is what you see really what you get? Business Today (Egypt), 1. Retrieved May 21, 2004, from the EBSCOhost database. Hanser, R. (2003, November). Transparency key to rebuilding trust, 21(43), 24-25. Retrieved May 20, 2004, from the EBSCOhost database. Lambert, J. (2003). Confidential Information. Retrieved May 21, 2004, from http://www.nipclaw.com/conf/basics.htm Osborne, D. (2004, January). Transparency and Accountability Reconsidered, 11(3), 292-300. Retrieved May 20, 2004, from the EBSCOhost database.