Table of Contents

Journalists' RTI course - final certificate

You have completed the 6-module Journalists' RTI course. The course trains reporters, editors, fact-checkers and freelance investigators to use the Right to Information Act, 2005 as a primary investigative source - building scoop-grade evidence, exploiting §4 proactive-disclosure obligations, and drafting RTIs that survive PIO §8 stonewalling.

What you covered

  1. Module 1: The journalist's first-RTI playbook - converting a tip into a §6(1) application that produces a story-ready record. Pattern: 5 specific records ranked by news-value, all asked in a single RTI.
  2. Module 2: §4 exploitation - every public authority is required to proactively disclose 17 categories of information under §4(1)(b) of the RTI Act. If the data is not on the website, that is itself a story (and an RTI).
  3. Module 3: Beat-by-beat strategy - urban-civic, education, health, defence procurement, environment, electoral. State-specific PIO directories at PIO Directory.
  4. Module 4: Surviving §8 stonewalling - the 10 standard refusal grounds and the citation arsenal that beats each. Bhagat Singh v. CIC (procedural objections), Girish Deshpande (limits of personal info), Subhash Agarwal (public-interest balance test).
  5. Module 5: Deadline busting - using the §19(1) First Appeal in 30 days flat, escalating to the CIC/SIC under §19(3), and the High Court Article 226 writ.
  6. Module 6: Editorial integrity - sourcing rules, redaction protocol, FOIA-style attribution, PII anonymisation per the DPDP Act 2023 consent rules.

Certificate

What to do next

  1. File your first investigative RTI - use our AI RTI Drafter.
  2. Set up tracking for every active RTI - Timeline Tracker alerts you on Day 30 + Day 60.
  3. Read the case-law arsenal: RTI case-law database - 300+ decisions you can cite.

Citations grounded in this course

Last reviewed: 4 May 2026.