European Week of Regions and Cities, 7 October 2019. Brussels: Four Motors for Europe.
More information:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=3994
Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation: Open infrastructures for communit...Ismael Peña-López
The document outlines Ismael Peña-López's vision for building an ecosystem of citizen participation in Catalonia. It proposes creating shared digital infrastructures and communities of practice to foster citizen engagement, improve public policy-making, and transform the relationship between citizens and government. The key goals are establishing a coherent, efficient, and effective nationwide ecosystem for participation; coordinating training activities; and promoting synergies across public bodies. Central to this vision is an online platform called ParticipaCatalunya.cat that would facilitate knowledge sharing, participation processes, and governance of the ecosystem.
Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation: Open infrastructures for communit...Ismael Peña-López
Mind the digital gap: making e-solutions accessible to everyone, 11 June 2020
More information:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=4163
Perspectives on Smart Cities Strategies: Sketching a Framework and Testing Fi...Stephan Haller
The document presents a framework for defining smart city strategies. It discusses existing smart city frameworks and identifies dimensions to consider, including city context, governance, implementation, and infrastructure. The framework is applied to analyze 6 cities, finding commonalities around quality of life motivations and differences in approaches. The framework is deemed useful for comparing cities and identifying strategy recommendations.
The document discusses co-design in the context of smart cities initiatives. It defines co-design as involving concrete collaboration with stakeholders to transform public services based on what end users want rather than just technological capabilities. Co-design can include various types of involvement like working with other municipalities, agencies, suppliers, citizens. Tools for co-design mentioned include meetings, workshops, surveys, focus groups, and process mapping. Lessons discussed are the importance of considering related concepts, building long-term trusting relationships, and effective communication and sharing of results.
Interoperability academy as an enabler for advanced digital skills(1)PanagiotisKeramidis
The document outlines the Interoperability Academy, which aims to improve advanced digital skills for public servants. It provides online and in-person courses on interoperability topics through its roadmap. Existing courses cover implementing the European Interoperability Framework and presenting data visually. Upcoming courses include introductions to standards like IMAPS, licensing, and linked data. The Academy also studies interoperability skills frameworks and maintains a collection of resources on Joinup.
WSIS10 Action Line C7 e-Government Lead Facilitator: UNDESADr Lendy Spires
This document summarizes achievements and challenges in implementing e-government through the UN WSIS Action Line C7 over the past 10 years. Key achievements include governments applying e-government to enhance service delivery and engagement, and UN agencies providing support through strategies, guidelines, and rankings. However, challenges remain in keeping up with technological changes and ensuring balanced participation. Recommendations focus on taking holistic e-governance approaches, addressing financing, promoting inclusion and open data, and improving essential e-services through multi-channel delivery.
The document discusses conclusions and the way forward regarding digital government building blocks in the context of end-to-end public service delivery. It states that countries can target digital government concepts and building blocks from the beginning, even if their public service management and technological maturity is lower. By doing so, countries can save time and resources for building better digital society services.
Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation: Open infrastructures for communit...Ismael Peña-López
The document outlines Ismael Peña-López's vision for building an ecosystem of citizen participation in Catalonia. It proposes creating shared digital infrastructures and communities of practice to foster citizen engagement, improve public policy-making, and transform the relationship between citizens and government. The key goals are establishing a coherent, efficient, and effective nationwide ecosystem for participation; coordinating training activities; and promoting synergies across public bodies. Central to this vision is an online platform called ParticipaCatalunya.cat that would facilitate knowledge sharing, participation processes, and governance of the ecosystem.
Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation: Open infrastructures for communit...Ismael Peña-López
Mind the digital gap: making e-solutions accessible to everyone, 11 June 2020
More information:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=4163
Perspectives on Smart Cities Strategies: Sketching a Framework and Testing Fi...Stephan Haller
The document presents a framework for defining smart city strategies. It discusses existing smart city frameworks and identifies dimensions to consider, including city context, governance, implementation, and infrastructure. The framework is applied to analyze 6 cities, finding commonalities around quality of life motivations and differences in approaches. The framework is deemed useful for comparing cities and identifying strategy recommendations.
The document discusses co-design in the context of smart cities initiatives. It defines co-design as involving concrete collaboration with stakeholders to transform public services based on what end users want rather than just technological capabilities. Co-design can include various types of involvement like working with other municipalities, agencies, suppliers, citizens. Tools for co-design mentioned include meetings, workshops, surveys, focus groups, and process mapping. Lessons discussed are the importance of considering related concepts, building long-term trusting relationships, and effective communication and sharing of results.
Interoperability academy as an enabler for advanced digital skills(1)PanagiotisKeramidis
The document outlines the Interoperability Academy, which aims to improve advanced digital skills for public servants. It provides online and in-person courses on interoperability topics through its roadmap. Existing courses cover implementing the European Interoperability Framework and presenting data visually. Upcoming courses include introductions to standards like IMAPS, licensing, and linked data. The Academy also studies interoperability skills frameworks and maintains a collection of resources on Joinup.
WSIS10 Action Line C7 e-Government Lead Facilitator: UNDESADr Lendy Spires
This document summarizes achievements and challenges in implementing e-government through the UN WSIS Action Line C7 over the past 10 years. Key achievements include governments applying e-government to enhance service delivery and engagement, and UN agencies providing support through strategies, guidelines, and rankings. However, challenges remain in keeping up with technological changes and ensuring balanced participation. Recommendations focus on taking holistic e-governance approaches, addressing financing, promoting inclusion and open data, and improving essential e-services through multi-channel delivery.
The document discusses conclusions and the way forward regarding digital government building blocks in the context of end-to-end public service delivery. It states that countries can target digital government concepts and building blocks from the beginning, even if their public service management and technological maturity is lower. By doing so, countries can save time and resources for building better digital society services.
The document discusses the URBACT program and the TOGETHER project. URBACT involves over 7,000 people from 54 projects across 28 countries who share experiences and lessons learned. Projects focus on social inclusion and address these issues through area-based approaches, policy challenges, and target groups. The TOGETHER project involved 14,000 citizens across 8 cities providing feedback on well-being and ill-being, which informed pilot actions and local action plans based on co-responsibility. URBACT conferences bring together cities to share knowledge and draft orientations to strengthen exchange, build capacity, and consolidate knowledge gained from their work.
Paper presented at The 10th International Conference on ICT, Society and Human Beings, part of the Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems, International Association for development of the Information Society, July 20 - 22, 2017
Lisbon, Portugal
Parliamentary Oversight of Sustainable Development Goals and the Application ...Dr. Fotios Fitsilis
Presentation at the 14th Wroxton Workshop of Parliamentary Scholars and Parliamentarians, 27-28 July 2019. Based on a joint working paper with Franklin De Vrieze.
The evolution of the interoperability concept a european quest for simplicity...PanagiotisKeramidis
The document discusses the evolution of the concept of interoperability from academic literature to frameworks developed by the European Union. It provides definitions of interoperability from academic literature and the 2017 European Interoperability Framework (EIF). The EIF definition focuses on the ability of organizations to interact towards mutually beneficial goals through information exchange, while academic definitions are more technical and lack objectives. The EU has developed initiatives and frameworks like the EIF to increase interoperability across systems and organizations in a governance approach. However, the concept remains complex with dispersed views as it has strongly evolved over time and fields.
Open Data meets Devolution: Open County InitiativeOpen Institute
Open County Initiative is a programme spearheaded by the Open Institute to promote open government principles to sub-national governments in Kenya. Through this initiative, the Open Institute and its partners work with county governments to publish open data relating to development of the county. In addition, we work to build appetite for open data and empower citizens to use their voice to speak with government.
This document analyzes several successful data ecosystems through interviews and case studies to identify recommendations for establishing sustainable data ecosystems. It examines local, geospatial, supply chain, agriculture, and disaster management data ecosystems. Key findings include the importance of collaborative governance, distributing value among stakeholders, technical standards, and long-term engagement. The analysis finds that an ecosystem approach to data development is effective and orchestration is crucial for self-sustainability while avoiding new data silos.
Advancing accessibility new measures, tools, and stakeholder engagement strat...BRTCoE
2015-01-13 Advancing Accessibility: New Measures, Tools, and Stakeholder Engagement Strategies for Boston and Beyond by Anson Stewart and Chris Zegras.
This document discusses the differences between a local digital agenda and a community digital agenda when implementing information and communication technologies (ICT) to support development in small rural communities. A community digital agenda takes a broader, more strategic approach that involves mobilizing all community partners and resources through multi-sector partnerships to develop ICT strategies. In contrast, a local digital agenda focuses narrowly on ICT supporting local authority services and skills for accessing those services. The document provides steps for implementing a community digital agenda, including developing ICT strategies through partnerships, conducting ICT audits, selecting and funding ICT solutions, and evaluating outcomes.
The document summarizes the work of the Moldova Innovation Lab, which aims to improve public services and policies in Moldova. The Lab works to redesign public services through simplifying processes and digitizing services. It also tests new approaches to policymaking, such as using evidence-based research, behavioral insights, and crowdsourcing ideas from citizens. Current projects include streamlining residence registration and helping migrants find work, as well as gathering community feedback to better inform local planning. The Lab brings together experts and partners to apply skills like service design, data analysis, and citizens engagement to pilot innovative solutions for public authorities in Moldova.
Regulatory impact assessment of laws in the Hellenic RepublicDr. Fotios Fitsilis
This document summarizes the regulatory impact assessment process in Greece. It outlines the EU policy cycle for assessments and the tools used, including regulatory impact assessments and post-legislative scrutiny. It then describes Greece's national policy process and the legal foundations for assessments. As a case study, it analyzes the regulatory impact assessment conducted for Law 4727/2020, which transposed an EU directive, outlining the intra-parliamentary process and structure of the assessment. It concludes by noting assessments are foreseen in Greek law and policy but exceptions exist.
To Regulate or not to Regulate - Opening the AI Black Box for Parliaments Dr. Fotios Fitsilis
This document discusses the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) in parliaments. It notes that while AI is being hyped, current systems are narrow and not true artificial general intelligence. Only about 10% of parliaments currently make use of AI. The document examines potential AI use cases for parliamentary processes and outlines several directions for research on AI challenges like ethics, bias, and legal issues. It argues that parliaments need to work cooperatively to determine appropriate regulatory parameters for emerging technologies and develop in-house regulations and transparency to govern advanced algorithms and build trust.
This document discusses inconsistencies with the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance used by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and problems with its accountability mechanisms. Specifically, it notes that the model has ambiguous and ill-defined forms, distorted roles between stakeholders, and a "democracy deficit" with a lack of representative diversity and transparency. It proposes solutions like an independent body to ensure ICANN follows its own rules and increasing participation from users and civil society.
Addme Activating Drivers for Digital eMpowerment in EuropeCATTID "Sapienza"
The ADD ME! project aims to create a pan-European network of organizations supporting disadvantaged groups' access to public services. The network will bring together organizations from 8 countries to share experiences and good practices. It will work to raise awareness of inclusive e-government policies and create a community for exchanges. The goal is to empower organizations helping the elderly, youth, and individuals with digital access issues. The network will use web 2.0 tools on the ePractice portal to collaborate and share resources and strategies for delivering inclusive public services.
INTERLINK: co-production of public services
A public service is an aggregation of all activities that realize a public authority's commitment to make available to individuals, businesses, or other public authorities some capabilities intended to answer their needs, giving them some possibilities to control whether, how and when such capabilities are manifested
Co-production is defined as the process in which services are jointly designed and/or delivered by public authorities and other stakeholders
Rethinking regulatory design uws conference 7 november 2011Terry Flew
The document discusses challenges facing Australia's National Classification Scheme (NCS) in light of changing media landscapes and technological convergence. Key issues include: outdated distinctions between platforms that no longer reflect how content is created and accessed; the need for a content-based rather than platform-based approach to classification; and tensions between protecting the public interest versus commercial interests as media and cultural policy has shifted towards serving industry. The Attorney General commissioned a review to consider reforms, including adopting a framework that provides consistent classification of media content across delivery platforms.
Anna Seravalli, Designing Urban Commons as a Matter of CommoningLabGov
This document discusses co-designing collaborative forms for urban commons. It explores the notions of commoning and agonism to navigate the practical and political aspects of collaboration.
Three case studies in Malmö, Sweden are presented: 1) A factory used for production that faced challenges in managing shared resources over time. 2) A neighborhood collaboration addressing urban issues but lacking resources to experiment. 3) An innovation platform involving government, academics and businesses but missing citizen involvement.
The conclusion emphasizes that designing collaborative forms for urban commons requires considering both the practical logistics of collaboration as well as the political dynamics around who is included and who holds power in the process. Commoning and agonism can help guide more inclusive and
CRTL-ALT-DEL to ALT-GOV by Joan Batlle MonserratForesight Gent
This presentation was meant for the #OpenGovernance session in Ghent on 11 June 2018 CRTL-ALT-DEL to ALT-GOV as part of the Eurocities #Cities4Europe campaign. All copyright belongs to Joan Batlle Monserrat
In this talk, I survey a series of research works in which I have collaborated during the last 5 years about data science applications on digital platforms for citizen participation. In particular, I describe solutions that we have developed for the analysis of discussion and controversy in web forums, the classification of the intention of messages in microblogging systems, the search and recommendation of citizen proposals, the extraction of argumentative information and access to contents of electronic participatory budgets through a conversational agent. For some of them, I will give a brief introduction to related research areas, such as web crawling and scraping, argument mining, and recommender systems.
This presentation provides an overview of Democratic Society, a networked organization working across Europe to connect citizens with decisions that shape their lives. It discusses their approach to participation and governance, programmatic structure consisting of 5 programs focused on democratic places, networked democracy, climate, digital, and democracy beyond government. It also outlines some of their current and past projects, including NetZeroCities, Conference on the Future of Europe evaluation, Scotland Climate Assembly, and Citizens' Voice for Digital Rights. Their approach to service delivery prioritizes inclusivity, transparency, and collaboration with partners.
20131002 athens e democracy m gonzalez-sanchogonzamg
digital democracy conference, Athens, 2 October 2013
Areas covered in the presentation:
1. overview of EC e-gov activities
2. e-participation and the policy cycle
3. lessons from the digital agenda
The document discusses the URBACT program and the TOGETHER project. URBACT involves over 7,000 people from 54 projects across 28 countries who share experiences and lessons learned. Projects focus on social inclusion and address these issues through area-based approaches, policy challenges, and target groups. The TOGETHER project involved 14,000 citizens across 8 cities providing feedback on well-being and ill-being, which informed pilot actions and local action plans based on co-responsibility. URBACT conferences bring together cities to share knowledge and draft orientations to strengthen exchange, build capacity, and consolidate knowledge gained from their work.
Paper presented at The 10th International Conference on ICT, Society and Human Beings, part of the Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems, International Association for development of the Information Society, July 20 - 22, 2017
Lisbon, Portugal
Parliamentary Oversight of Sustainable Development Goals and the Application ...Dr. Fotios Fitsilis
Presentation at the 14th Wroxton Workshop of Parliamentary Scholars and Parliamentarians, 27-28 July 2019. Based on a joint working paper with Franklin De Vrieze.
The evolution of the interoperability concept a european quest for simplicity...PanagiotisKeramidis
The document discusses the evolution of the concept of interoperability from academic literature to frameworks developed by the European Union. It provides definitions of interoperability from academic literature and the 2017 European Interoperability Framework (EIF). The EIF definition focuses on the ability of organizations to interact towards mutually beneficial goals through information exchange, while academic definitions are more technical and lack objectives. The EU has developed initiatives and frameworks like the EIF to increase interoperability across systems and organizations in a governance approach. However, the concept remains complex with dispersed views as it has strongly evolved over time and fields.
Open Data meets Devolution: Open County InitiativeOpen Institute
Open County Initiative is a programme spearheaded by the Open Institute to promote open government principles to sub-national governments in Kenya. Through this initiative, the Open Institute and its partners work with county governments to publish open data relating to development of the county. In addition, we work to build appetite for open data and empower citizens to use their voice to speak with government.
This document analyzes several successful data ecosystems through interviews and case studies to identify recommendations for establishing sustainable data ecosystems. It examines local, geospatial, supply chain, agriculture, and disaster management data ecosystems. Key findings include the importance of collaborative governance, distributing value among stakeholders, technical standards, and long-term engagement. The analysis finds that an ecosystem approach to data development is effective and orchestration is crucial for self-sustainability while avoiding new data silos.
Advancing accessibility new measures, tools, and stakeholder engagement strat...BRTCoE
2015-01-13 Advancing Accessibility: New Measures, Tools, and Stakeholder Engagement Strategies for Boston and Beyond by Anson Stewart and Chris Zegras.
This document discusses the differences between a local digital agenda and a community digital agenda when implementing information and communication technologies (ICT) to support development in small rural communities. A community digital agenda takes a broader, more strategic approach that involves mobilizing all community partners and resources through multi-sector partnerships to develop ICT strategies. In contrast, a local digital agenda focuses narrowly on ICT supporting local authority services and skills for accessing those services. The document provides steps for implementing a community digital agenda, including developing ICT strategies through partnerships, conducting ICT audits, selecting and funding ICT solutions, and evaluating outcomes.
The document summarizes the work of the Moldova Innovation Lab, which aims to improve public services and policies in Moldova. The Lab works to redesign public services through simplifying processes and digitizing services. It also tests new approaches to policymaking, such as using evidence-based research, behavioral insights, and crowdsourcing ideas from citizens. Current projects include streamlining residence registration and helping migrants find work, as well as gathering community feedback to better inform local planning. The Lab brings together experts and partners to apply skills like service design, data analysis, and citizens engagement to pilot innovative solutions for public authorities in Moldova.
Regulatory impact assessment of laws in the Hellenic RepublicDr. Fotios Fitsilis
This document summarizes the regulatory impact assessment process in Greece. It outlines the EU policy cycle for assessments and the tools used, including regulatory impact assessments and post-legislative scrutiny. It then describes Greece's national policy process and the legal foundations for assessments. As a case study, it analyzes the regulatory impact assessment conducted for Law 4727/2020, which transposed an EU directive, outlining the intra-parliamentary process and structure of the assessment. It concludes by noting assessments are foreseen in Greek law and policy but exceptions exist.
To Regulate or not to Regulate - Opening the AI Black Box for Parliaments Dr. Fotios Fitsilis
This document discusses the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) in parliaments. It notes that while AI is being hyped, current systems are narrow and not true artificial general intelligence. Only about 10% of parliaments currently make use of AI. The document examines potential AI use cases for parliamentary processes and outlines several directions for research on AI challenges like ethics, bias, and legal issues. It argues that parliaments need to work cooperatively to determine appropriate regulatory parameters for emerging technologies and develop in-house regulations and transparency to govern advanced algorithms and build trust.
This document discusses inconsistencies with the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance used by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and problems with its accountability mechanisms. Specifically, it notes that the model has ambiguous and ill-defined forms, distorted roles between stakeholders, and a "democracy deficit" with a lack of representative diversity and transparency. It proposes solutions like an independent body to ensure ICANN follows its own rules and increasing participation from users and civil society.
Addme Activating Drivers for Digital eMpowerment in EuropeCATTID "Sapienza"
The ADD ME! project aims to create a pan-European network of organizations supporting disadvantaged groups' access to public services. The network will bring together organizations from 8 countries to share experiences and good practices. It will work to raise awareness of inclusive e-government policies and create a community for exchanges. The goal is to empower organizations helping the elderly, youth, and individuals with digital access issues. The network will use web 2.0 tools on the ePractice portal to collaborate and share resources and strategies for delivering inclusive public services.
INTERLINK: co-production of public services
A public service is an aggregation of all activities that realize a public authority's commitment to make available to individuals, businesses, or other public authorities some capabilities intended to answer their needs, giving them some possibilities to control whether, how and when such capabilities are manifested
Co-production is defined as the process in which services are jointly designed and/or delivered by public authorities and other stakeholders
Rethinking regulatory design uws conference 7 november 2011Terry Flew
The document discusses challenges facing Australia's National Classification Scheme (NCS) in light of changing media landscapes and technological convergence. Key issues include: outdated distinctions between platforms that no longer reflect how content is created and accessed; the need for a content-based rather than platform-based approach to classification; and tensions between protecting the public interest versus commercial interests as media and cultural policy has shifted towards serving industry. The Attorney General commissioned a review to consider reforms, including adopting a framework that provides consistent classification of media content across delivery platforms.
Anna Seravalli, Designing Urban Commons as a Matter of CommoningLabGov
This document discusses co-designing collaborative forms for urban commons. It explores the notions of commoning and agonism to navigate the practical and political aspects of collaboration.
Three case studies in Malmö, Sweden are presented: 1) A factory used for production that faced challenges in managing shared resources over time. 2) A neighborhood collaboration addressing urban issues but lacking resources to experiment. 3) An innovation platform involving government, academics and businesses but missing citizen involvement.
The conclusion emphasizes that designing collaborative forms for urban commons requires considering both the practical logistics of collaboration as well as the political dynamics around who is included and who holds power in the process. Commoning and agonism can help guide more inclusive and
CRTL-ALT-DEL to ALT-GOV by Joan Batlle MonserratForesight Gent
This presentation was meant for the #OpenGovernance session in Ghent on 11 June 2018 CRTL-ALT-DEL to ALT-GOV as part of the Eurocities #Cities4Europe campaign. All copyright belongs to Joan Batlle Monserrat
In this talk, I survey a series of research works in which I have collaborated during the last 5 years about data science applications on digital platforms for citizen participation. In particular, I describe solutions that we have developed for the analysis of discussion and controversy in web forums, the classification of the intention of messages in microblogging systems, the search and recommendation of citizen proposals, the extraction of argumentative information and access to contents of electronic participatory budgets through a conversational agent. For some of them, I will give a brief introduction to related research areas, such as web crawling and scraping, argument mining, and recommender systems.
This presentation provides an overview of Democratic Society, a networked organization working across Europe to connect citizens with decisions that shape their lives. It discusses their approach to participation and governance, programmatic structure consisting of 5 programs focused on democratic places, networked democracy, climate, digital, and democracy beyond government. It also outlines some of their current and past projects, including NetZeroCities, Conference on the Future of Europe evaluation, Scotland Climate Assembly, and Citizens' Voice for Digital Rights. Their approach to service delivery prioritizes inclusivity, transparency, and collaboration with partners.
20131002 athens e democracy m gonzalez-sanchogonzamg
digital democracy conference, Athens, 2 October 2013
Areas covered in the presentation:
1. overview of EC e-gov activities
2. e-participation and the policy cycle
3. lessons from the digital agenda
Networks for Citizen Consultation and Citizen Sourcing of Expertise: Explor...@cristobalcobo
"New ICTs + New Media = New Democracy? Communications policy and public life in the age of broadband"
Experts’ workshop
New America Foundation, 1899 L St NW, Washington, DC
September 20-22, 2011
www.americanthinktank.net
Cristobal Cobo, Ph.D
Research Fellow
Oxford Internet Institute
University of Oxford
National e-participation environment presentation by Niklas Wilhelmsson, Ministry of Justice, Finland - Unit for Democracy, Language Affairs and Fundamental Rights. Steven Clit's slides from the same event here: https://db.tt/BOhhQ0Ex
Evaluating eParticipation sophistication of Regional Authorities websites: Th...Efthimios Tambouris
Paper presented in ePart 2019 conference, Linz, Austria. The paper is available from Springer (see http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-642-03781-8_7)
This presentation discusses the results of recent research conducted by Paskaleva on European trends on smart cities in the context of open innovation. It draws from analyses of key European Union programmes, latest international projects and related activities. The emerging new approach to open innovation is discussed that links technologies with people, the urban territory and other cities to reap the benefits of modern technological and social advance. It is suggested that using open innovation for building the smart (-er) city can be effective, efficient and sustainable but consistent frameworks, principles and strategic agendas are necessary to optimally bind these elements together.
Presentation given by Goran Forbici at the Service Design and Delivery in a Digital Age - Academies for EaP countries organised by the SIGMA Programme and the GiZ Eastern Partnership Regional Fund. Topic 4: Gathering user insights and feedback.
Presentation by the OECD on the "OECD National Schools of Government Network"...OECD Governance
This presentation by Michael O'Neill, OECD, on the "OECD National Schools of Government Network" was made at the meeting of the OECD Working Party on Public Employment and Management on 20-21 April 2015.
For further on information on the OECD work on Public Employment and Management please see http://www.oecd.org/gov/pem/.
Presentation by the OECD on Encouraging Open Data in Governments made at the ...OECD Governance
This presentation by Barbara Ubaldi (OECD) was made at the OECD conference on Innovating the Public Sector: From Ideas to Impact (12-13 November 2014). For more information visit the OECD Observatory of Public Sector Innovation: https://www.oecd.org/governance/observatory-public-sector-innovation/events/.
Living Networks and Urban Labs are addressing major challenges facing cities through social innovation and citizen participation. Some key challenges mentioned include climate change, energy sustainability, and sustainable water and food supplies. Sustainable solutions require diverse knowledge and collaboration between public and private spheres. Living Labs create open ecosystems to engage stakeholders, stimulate collaboration and enable behavior transformation. ENoLL currently supports 236 European Living Labs and 38 outside of Europe, working to expand globally. Thematic subnetworks focus on issues like smart cities, health, and sustainability. ENoLL is developing a Public-Private Partnership initiative to support research, education, large-scale pilots and international collaboration to address challenges through user-driven open innovation.
This introduction to Nesta’s work on digital democracy was shared with the Kirklees Democracy Commission as part of our evidence gathering in September 2016.
Lorena Pocatilu - strategies for smart city knowledge platform and open datatu1204
The document discusses strategies for implementing smart city knowledge platforms and open data. It describes how knowledge platforms can provide access to new information, open data, connect users, and enable collaboration and innovation. As more people live in cities, knowledge platforms and open data can help manage information more efficiently to improve quality of life. Successful implementation requires addressing barriers like cultures opposed to openness and data quality problems. Open data offers opportunities to analyze and visualize data from different sources which is important for addressing societal challenges in smart cities. Several initiatives for open data are also described.
This area of the OECD's work focuses on new research in the area of innovative citizen participation practices to analyse the new forms of deliberative, collaborative and participatory decision-making that are evolving across the globe.
Digitalisation of finance activities: Challenges and opportunities - Edwin L...OECD Governance
This presentation was made by Edwin Lau, OECD, at the 40th Annual Meeting of OECD Senior Budget Officials (SBO) held in Tallinn, Estonia, on 5-6 June 2019
This document discusses the potential for direct digital democracy using collective intelligence and connectivity enabled by modern technology. It outlines how social media and smart devices allow for an exponential growth in connections between expert citizens and shared information. This global collective intelligence could be applied to politics through problems mapping, collecting proposals, and final evaluation votes to decide solutions. The document calls for connecting and enhancing existing e-democracy tools in Europe, and introducing direct digital democracy at all government levels, allowing real-time voting and mass citizen participation without political party filters. The goal is knowledge socialization to address rational ignorance and corporate/multinational influence over governments.
Citizen-centric public services in the Western Balkans:
Webinar 1 - Service design and user experience, 5 April 2022.
Presentation given by Bruna Monteiro, Centricity.
Similar to Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation. Participation infrastructures (20)
Formación para desarrollar la organización: entornos complejos, personas abie...Ismael Peña-López
Share4Value: Universidades Corporativas, 18 de abril de 2024
Châteauform’ Campus La Mola: Cegos, Repsol, Châteauform.
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5244
Ciencia ciudadana: por qué ciudadana y cómo y quién impulsarla desde lo públicoIsmael Peña-López
Programa formativo de ciencia ciudadana 2024, 15 de marzo de 2024
Granada: Medialab UGR Universidad de Granada.
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5195
Transformación de la Administración Pública catalana. El rol de la EAPCIsmael Peña-López
Misión académica internacional Barcelona sobre gestión pública avanzada, 25 de noviembre de 2023, UPC Lima
Más información en:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5136
Innovació a la Funció Pública: oxímoron, paradoxa o tautologiaIsmael Peña-López
Grup de treball de polítiques de serveis personals locals ICPS, 15 de novembre de 2023
Més informació a:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5134
Postgrau en lideratge institucional i gestió de politiques públiques. 17 de novembre de 2023
Més informació:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5135
De la formación al acompañamiento integral del talento. El caso de la EAPCIsmael Peña-López
I Curso Internacional de Educación Digital Democrática y Open EdTech. 13 de Julio de 2022
Más información
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5117
Sessió pràctica a Administració i Polítiques Públiques, 23 de febrer de 2022.
Més informació
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5116
Jornada sobre ètica, bon govern i contractació pública, 31 de gener de 2022
Més informació:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5115
L’ecosistema català de participació ciutadana: el paper de la tecnologiaIsmael Peña-López
Curs Participació i tecnologia. Les possibilitats del Decidim. 20 d'abril de 2021
Més informació:
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=5099
La gestión integral del talento en la Administración centrada en la política ...Ismael Peña-López
El documento describe la transición de los sistemas de gobierno a ecosistemas de gobernanza y del modelo de función pública al servicio público. Explica que los ecosistemas de gobernanza incluyen actores formales e informales que brindan servicios especializados, en comparación con los sistemas jerárquicos. También describe la transición del enfoque en aplicar procedimientos en la función pública al diseño e implementación de políticas públicas orientadas a servicios en el servicio público.
Aprendibilidad: por qué y cómo. El Modelo de aprendizaje y desarrollo de la E...Ismael Peña-López
Este documento presenta un nuevo modelo de aprendizaje y desarrollo para la Escuela de Administración Pública de Catalunya (EAPC) basado en la aprendibilidad. Propone estrategias para promover el aprender a aprender mientras el autor esté presente y para construir el aprendizaje a lo largo de la vida cuando no esté. El modelo incluye niveles de adquisición, aplicación y transformación con atributos de empoderamiento, competencias y transformación social.
Good practices and challenges in e-learning. From training to lifelong learni...Ismael Peña-López
Current trends in professional development of civil servants, 14 November 2022. Tbilisi: Civil Service Bureu Georgia, ESCape / European Commission
https://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=4853
How To Cultivate Community Affinity Throughout The Generosity JourneyAggregage
This session will dive into how to create rich generosity experiences that foster long-lasting relationships. You’ll walk away with actionable insights to redefine how you engage with your supporters — emphasizing trust, engagement, and community!
FT author
Amanda Chu
US Energy Reporter
PREMIUM
June 20 2024
Good morning and welcome back to Energy Source, coming to you from New York, where the city swelters in its first heatwave of the season.
Nearly 80 million people were under alerts in the US north-east and midwest yesterday as temperatures in some municipalities reached record highs in a test to the country’s rickety power grid.
In other news, the Financial Times has a new Big Read this morning on Russia’s grip on nuclear power. Despite sanctions on its economy, the Kremlin continues to be an unrivalled exporter of nuclear power plants, building more than half of all reactors under construction globally. Read how Moscow is using these projects to wield global influence.
Today’s Energy Source dives into the latest Statistical Review of World Energy, the industry’s annual stocktake of global energy consumption. The report was published for more than 70 years by BP before it was passed over to the Energy Institute last year. The oil major remains a contributor.
Data Drill looks at a new analysis from the World Bank showing gas flaring is at a four-year high.
Thanks for reading,
Amanda
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New report offers sobering view of the energy transition
Every year the Statistical Review of World Energy offers a behemoth of data on the state of the global energy market. This year’s findings highlight the world’s insatiable demand for energy and the need to speed up the pace of decarbonisation.
Here are our four main takeaways from this year’s report:
Fossil fuel consumption — and emissions — are at record highs
Countries burnt record amounts of oil and coal last year, sending global fossil fuel consumption and emissions to all-time highs, the Energy Institute reported. Oil demand grew 2.6 per cent, surpassing 100mn barrels per day for the first time.
Meanwhile, the share of fossil fuels in the energy mix declined slightly by half a percentage point, but still made up more than 81 per cent of consumption.
Causes Supporting Charity for Elderly PeopleSERUDS INDIA
Around 52% of the elder populations in India are living in poverty and poor health problems. In this technological world, they became very backward without having any knowledge about technology. So they’re dependent on working hard for their daily earnings, they’re physically very weak. Thus charity organizations are made to help and raise them and also to give them hope to live.
Donate Us:
https://serudsindia.org/supporting-charity-for-elderly-people-india/
#oldagehome, #donateforeldersinkurnool, #donateforelders, #donationforelders, #donateforoldpeople, #donationforoldpeople, #sponsorforelders, #sponsorforoldpeople, #donationforcharity, #charity, #seruds, #kurnool, #donateforoldagehome, #oldagehomedonation
Presentation by Rebecca Sachs and Joshua Varcie, analysts in CBO’s Health Analysis Division, at the 13th Annual Conference of the American Society of Health Economists.
3. Vision & Mission of Citizen Participation
Vision
The Administration keeps a constant dialogue with citizens.
Mission
To transform the Administration by means of citizen
participation, and to transform the Administration to enable
citizen participation.
3
4. Theory of change (most abridged)
4
Electoral processes
Direct democracy
Deliberative processes
Transformation of
the Administration
New actors & new spaces
Infrastructures
Improve efficacy and efficiency
of public policies
Understanding the complexity of
public decision-making
Reduce populism (fascism)
Foster a shift towards a
technopolitical paradigm
of collective action
6. Ecosystem of citizen participation
Nationwide ecosystem of citizen participation, coherent
and consistent in methodology and infrastructures, efficient
and effective
Space of coordination and exchange of knowledge
Foster instruments collectively
Coordinate training activities
Promote synergies between public bodies
6
7. Infrastructures of citizen participation
Methodology
Training
Technology
New actors, new spaces, new instruments
Governance of the model
7
8. Decidim Catalunya: goals
A tool for a methodology: technology is not neutral
A service for all and from all
1 solution for everybody
Economies of scale
Network economies
Expand the AOC model of Transparency and e-Government
Digital identity
1 citizen, 1 digital identity
1 citizen, 1 multilevel identity
An actor with a voice of its own in a big community
Decidim (‘we decide’), a participation and KM digital platform
8
9. ParticipaLab network: A network of networks
5 directorates-general
Several networks
Telecentres
Libraries
Civic centres
Social innovation labs
1,500 public facilities
ParticipaLab (‘participation lab’),
a ‘quality democracy’ layer for public facilities
9
10. ParticipaLab network: Goals
Turn public facilities into reference sites in the municipality on citizen
participation and engagement.
Raise awareness on quality democracy, citizen participation and
innovation on political and democratic processes.
Coach the local Administration in citizen participation projects and
social innovation for political and democratic processes.
Guide citizens through citizen participation processes, increase their
willingness to engage and broaden the socio-demografic range of
participants.
Promote social innovation projects in the field of civic action, politics
and democracy.
10
11. ParticipaLab network: Portfolio
11
Goal n Resource 1 Resource 2 Resource 3 Resource n
Network 1
Network 2
Network 3
Network n
Coordination
committee
Technical
office
DG
leading
the resource
Resource
• Tasks
• Products
12. Identificació del
departament o organisme
To cite this document:
Peña-López, I. (2019). Catalan ecosystem of citizen participation. Participation
infrastructures. European Week of Regions and Cities, 7 October 2019.
Brussels: Four Motors for Europe
http://ictlogy.net/presentations/20191007_ismael_pena-lopez_-_catalan_ecosystem_citizen_participation.pdf
To contact the author:
ismael.pena@gencat.cat
@ictlogist
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Creative Commons license:
Attribution – Non Commercial
More information please visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/