This document discusses a study on resilience from a multi-stakeholder perspective. It examines resilience as resisting, recovering, and changing in response to influences. Eleven participants were interviewed for 53 minutes on average, generating over 60,000 words of transcript. The document analyzes the perspectives of different stakeholders on the purpose, time, and change dimensions of resilience. It finds that social systems are central to resilience and can thrive despite problems with technical systems. Change in social systems was seen to lead to changes in technical systems over time.
Design To Make a Difference: Beyond UX Unicorns to the 5 Layers of Service Ar...Jess McMullin
UXCamp Ottawa 2013 talk sharing how to do design that makes a difference, especially in government and the public sector. Introduces service architecture framework to help designers and public servants think about larger service delivery system beyond the direct service experience.
The document discusses open authority and defines it as involving museum expertise, community contributions, and varying levels of open participation from crowdsourcing to co-creative interpretation. It also discusses the Reggio Emilia educational approach which focuses on the interests of children, rethinking student-teacher relationships, and the importance of community. Open authority is characterized as providing access to expertise, community participation, a platform, content to engage with, shared control and dialogue, a focus on process over product, and evidence of collaboration.
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The document discusses service transformation as organizational transformation required to design and deliver new services integrated into ongoing business strategy and operations at scale. It presents a three-layer framework for transformation consisting of delivery, foundations, and bedrock. Design-driven transformation uses compelling customer experiences as boundary objects to motivate change across the different layers and pace of change. The framework helps ask strategic questions to solve organizational problems.
This document summarizes a town hall meeting between Stan Freck from Microsoft and Evan Burfield from Synteractive discussing how technology can help citizens engage with their local governments. They describe how changing demographics and ubiquitous connectivity are increasing demands for online citizen engagement. They promote Microsoft TownHall and Synteractive's Citizen services/open dataSocialRally platform as tools that can connect and empower citizens through moderated forums, analytics, and customization options. Examples of organizations using these tools include NASA, Colombian presidential candidates, and the House Republican forum.
Green Digital Charter Workshop - Working with citizensAlec Walker-Love
This document discusses citizen engagement in three levels: inform and consult, include and collaborate, and empower and co-create. Inform and consult involves one-way communication methods like websites and public meetings to share information. Include and collaborate builds trust through workshops and social media for joint work. Empower and co-create gives citizens real participation through design workshops, participatory budgeting, and handing over control of communications. The overall goal is to incorporate public perspectives into decision-making at different stages.
Citizen Engagement & Urban Transformation: the REMOURBAN projectAlec Walker-Love
Initial discussion document for good practices in Citizen Engagement (*edited/selected slides*).
Our objective: develop a successful framework for citizen engagement strategies for 3 lighthouse & 2 follower cities engaging in major renovation, energy efficiency and smart city works. www.remourban.eu
This document discusses a study on resilience from a multi-stakeholder perspective. It examines resilience as resisting, recovering, and changing in response to influences. Eleven participants were interviewed for 53 minutes on average, generating over 60,000 words of transcript. The document analyzes the perspectives of different stakeholders on the purpose, time, and change dimensions of resilience. It finds that social systems are central to resilience and can thrive despite problems with technical systems. Change in social systems was seen to lead to changes in technical systems over time.
Design To Make a Difference: Beyond UX Unicorns to the 5 Layers of Service Ar...Jess McMullin
UXCamp Ottawa 2013 talk sharing how to do design that makes a difference, especially in government and the public sector. Introduces service architecture framework to help designers and public servants think about larger service delivery system beyond the direct service experience.
The document discusses open authority and defines it as involving museum expertise, community contributions, and varying levels of open participation from crowdsourcing to co-creative interpretation. It also discusses the Reggio Emilia educational approach which focuses on the interests of children, rethinking student-teacher relationships, and the importance of community. Open authority is characterized as providing access to expertise, community participation, a platform, content to engage with, shared control and dialogue, a focus on process over product, and evidence of collaboration.
Service Transformation and Service DesignJess McMullin
The document discusses service transformation as organizational transformation required to design and deliver new services integrated into ongoing business strategy and operations at scale. It presents a three-layer framework for transformation consisting of delivery, foundations, and bedrock. Design-driven transformation uses compelling customer experiences as boundary objects to motivate change across the different layers and pace of change. The framework helps ask strategic questions to solve organizational problems.
This document summarizes a town hall meeting between Stan Freck from Microsoft and Evan Burfield from Synteractive discussing how technology can help citizens engage with their local governments. They describe how changing demographics and ubiquitous connectivity are increasing demands for online citizen engagement. They promote Microsoft TownHall and Synteractive's Citizen services/open dataSocialRally platform as tools that can connect and empower citizens through moderated forums, analytics, and customization options. Examples of organizations using these tools include NASA, Colombian presidential candidates, and the House Republican forum.
Green Digital Charter Workshop - Working with citizensAlec Walker-Love
This document discusses citizen engagement in three levels: inform and consult, include and collaborate, and empower and co-create. Inform and consult involves one-way communication methods like websites and public meetings to share information. Include and collaborate builds trust through workshops and social media for joint work. Empower and co-create gives citizens real participation through design workshops, participatory budgeting, and handing over control of communications. The overall goal is to incorporate public perspectives into decision-making at different stages.
Citizen Engagement & Urban Transformation: the REMOURBAN projectAlec Walker-Love
Initial discussion document for good practices in Citizen Engagement (*edited/selected slides*).
Our objective: develop a successful framework for citizen engagement strategies for 3 lighthouse & 2 follower cities engaging in major renovation, energy efficiency and smart city works. www.remourban.eu
De Liddo - ODET 2010: Online Deliberation Emerging Tools Workshop Anna De Liddo
Presentation for ODET 2010: Online Deliberation Emerging Tools (Leeds, 30 June), a workshop co-located with the Fourth International Conference on Online Deliberation (30 June–2 July, 2010).
Urban Hub17: Integral Program Design - Thriveable CitiesPaul van Schaık
This document provides an overview and introduction to resources from Integral UrbanHub on using integral theory and frameworks to design thriveable cities. It summarizes perspectives from experts on the importance of developing urban centers and discusses concepts like integral methodological pluralism and integral program design. The document advertises additional books and guides available on integralurbanhub.org that apply integral theory to understand challenges cities face and how to address them through collaboration across sectors and worldviews.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration to solve massive social challenges at scale.
This document discusses open social mapping, which combines actor modeling, social network analysis, crowdsourcing, and customer relationship management tools to allow stakeholders to map themselves. This helps designers understand social systems from the perspectives of real stakeholders. Benefits include centering stakeholders, identifying disconnects, increasing understanding of diversity, and facilitating shared understanding between stakeholders. Challenges include maintaining participation, addressing privacy concerns, and ensuring interoperability between maps. Examples of open social mapping projects in Canada are provided.
This document provides background information on public participation and citizen engagement. It discusses the history of public participation dating back to ancient Greece and its importance in democratic societies. It also outlines some of the key principles of public participation, including Arnstein's Ladder of Citizen Participation, which categorizes different levels of participation from non-participation to citizen power. The document then examines some of the common problems with current approaches to public participation, such as ineffective methods that fail to genuinely capture community input and instead lead to disconnection between communities and public spaces.
1) The document discusses how communication can contribute to social change and empowerment through bottom-up approaches that involve local communities.
2) It provides examples of projects like Dream Hamar in Norway and workshops in Ecuador that engaged communities through participatory design processes and online platforms to reimagine public spaces.
3) These tactics prioritized communication and collaboration over top-down strategies, empowering communities and contributing to locally-owned reforms.
A series of graphics from integralMENTORS integral UrbanHub work on IMP and Thriveable Cities
These books show the graphics from a dynamic deck that accompany a presentation on Visions & WorldViews and Thriveable Cities. The history of the co-evolution of cities, evolving WorldViews, Visions & Mindsets in Urban Habitats and technology is presented in an integral framework.
Integral theory is simply explained as it relates to these themes see UH 2 & UH 3 for more detail.
These volumes are part of an ongoing series of guides to integrally inform practitioners.
A case study analysis on digital convergent design: Skynet Platformdi8it
This document presents the results of a case study analysis on the SkyNet digital convergent design platform. The study employed structured interviews to survey people's attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors regarding convergent services. Key findings include:
1) Participants were most likely to engage with interactive TV features directly related to enhancing TV content experience, such as getting additional information about shows.
2) Internet-based interactive services saw less usage, suggesting people view TV as primarily for passive viewing.
3) Exposure to interactive features through devices like Sky+ boxes increased likelihood of using interactivity.
4) Constraints like slow performance or disrupting the TV experience reduced openness to interactivity. Participants preferred features that
This is a second take on a philosophical understanding of governance, from the point of view of knowledge and power. Here I try to understand the concept and what's it for using three main thinkers: Habermas, Foucault and Merleau-Ponty. While I claim that this is not cherry-picking of concepts, the truth is that there is much more to be said about governance from the point of view of knowledge formation.
The document summarizes Per Linde's intervention at a conference on smart cities. It discusses projects from important European cities aimed at creating more human-centered smart cities. Specifically, it outlines a presentation on the Malmö Living Lab project in Malmö, Sweden, which aims to uplift local identities, increase civic participation, and enhance public interaction through collaborative neighborhood initiatives and social innovation. The presentation describes the context, problems addressed, strategies used, solutions developed, and reflections on the project.
1) The document discusses the philosophical bases for universal design and the acceptability of implementing universal access principles in both the digital and physical world.
2) It argues that while access is seen as a core value and right in the digital world, there is more reluctance to implement access universally in the physical world.
3) The document advocates applying the emerging values of the digital age like facilitation, transparency, collaboration, and end-user design to promoting universal access in the material world to make physical environments accessible to all.
The document discusses the goals and challenges of the ESSENCE project, which aims to develop online tools to facilitate structured analysis and dialogue around global issues like climate change. It notes that while argument mapping tools exist, they can be difficult for most users and lack incentives for both creation and use of arguments. The document advocates taking a socio-technical systems approach to develop tool systems tailored to specific collaborative communities, by understanding user goals, roles, and collaboration patterns in their unique context of use.
Are there ways in which we could use new smart technologies to aid the shift to a participative democracy rather then merely increasing passive consumption?
Digital Texts scholarly communication in a digital networked ageTony Hirst
1. The document discusses scholarly communication and proposes that the traditional model of journal publications no longer adequately defines communication units.
2. It suggests moving towards more granular, participatory, and networked forms of publishing like open notebooks, living documents, and composite works that dynamically combine information from multiple sources.
3. Key aspects that could be rethought include the purpose and audience of publishing, units of publication beyond journal articles, and utilizing social features like version control, issue tracking, and peer review to facilitate ongoing scholarly discourse.
The document summarizes the Emerge project, which aimed to support the formation of an effective and sustainable community of practice around the Users and Innovation Development Model using Web 2.0 technologies. Over 28 months, Emerge used community development processes and social networking to provide professional development, stimulate collaboration between projects, and improve awareness of projects in a wider context. Going forward, Emerge hopes to become a user-centered social learning hub that amplifies the outputs, connections, and impact of individuals and networks interested in educational learning and teaching.
Societal Architecture and its promises for sustainable development Jan Goossenaerts
Mankind at a crossroads: virtuous development or vicious deterioration?
An interdependent journeys perspective
Accelerated localization of knowledge in “every journey”
Enablers for a talent explosion
Societal architecture as necessary capability
Restoring balances in the anthropocene
Information access driving transformation capacities - #xy2wiki
Online explorations
Open source tools and public standards
Wiki’s supporting #tagcoding; micro blogs
E-books
ElectroSmog SkillShare: Tools and Models for Online CollaborationEyebeam
Eyebeam participated in ElectroSmog, a new festival that revolves around the concept of Sustainable Immobility. The festival, which takes place simultaneously at many locations around the world, introduces and explores the concept of sustainable immobility in both theory and practice, with discussions, workshops, and performances taking place at each of the festival partners' home bases.
Agile Design and Collaborative Creativity in Web of ThingsMartin Mahaux
The document discusses agile design and collaborative creativity for socio-technical systems like the Web of Things. It argues that to drive sustainable innovation in these complex, fast-moving systems, an agile design approach is needed that incorporates collaboration through iterative experimental design with stakeholders. Creativity is defined as something that is both novel and useful. The document also discusses the role of participation, noting that it can lead to more sustainability if certain obstacles are mitigated, as it empowers people and revives democracy by opening up solution spaces to more viewpoints and concerns. However, it may be restricted to elites unless specific facilitation is provided, and individualism or tensions between amateurs and experts could still undermine participation's benefits.
Introduction to Strategic Doing for Community DevelopmentEd Morrison
Strategic Doing developed at a very granular level: working on the complex challenges within neighborhoods and communities. This paper explores how this new approach for developing strategy can be used to strengthen communities.
De Liddo - ODET 2010: Online Deliberation Emerging Tools Workshop Anna De Liddo
Presentation for ODET 2010: Online Deliberation Emerging Tools (Leeds, 30 June), a workshop co-located with the Fourth International Conference on Online Deliberation (30 June–2 July, 2010).
Urban Hub17: Integral Program Design - Thriveable CitiesPaul van Schaık
This document provides an overview and introduction to resources from Integral UrbanHub on using integral theory and frameworks to design thriveable cities. It summarizes perspectives from experts on the importance of developing urban centers and discusses concepts like integral methodological pluralism and integral program design. The document advertises additional books and guides available on integralurbanhub.org that apply integral theory to understand challenges cities face and how to address them through collaboration across sectors and worldviews.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration to solve massive social challenges at scale.
This document discusses open social mapping, which combines actor modeling, social network analysis, crowdsourcing, and customer relationship management tools to allow stakeholders to map themselves. This helps designers understand social systems from the perspectives of real stakeholders. Benefits include centering stakeholders, identifying disconnects, increasing understanding of diversity, and facilitating shared understanding between stakeholders. Challenges include maintaining participation, addressing privacy concerns, and ensuring interoperability between maps. Examples of open social mapping projects in Canada are provided.
This document provides background information on public participation and citizen engagement. It discusses the history of public participation dating back to ancient Greece and its importance in democratic societies. It also outlines some of the key principles of public participation, including Arnstein's Ladder of Citizen Participation, which categorizes different levels of participation from non-participation to citizen power. The document then examines some of the common problems with current approaches to public participation, such as ineffective methods that fail to genuinely capture community input and instead lead to disconnection between communities and public spaces.
1) The document discusses how communication can contribute to social change and empowerment through bottom-up approaches that involve local communities.
2) It provides examples of projects like Dream Hamar in Norway and workshops in Ecuador that engaged communities through participatory design processes and online platforms to reimagine public spaces.
3) These tactics prioritized communication and collaboration over top-down strategies, empowering communities and contributing to locally-owned reforms.
A series of graphics from integralMENTORS integral UrbanHub work on IMP and Thriveable Cities
These books show the graphics from a dynamic deck that accompany a presentation on Visions & WorldViews and Thriveable Cities. The history of the co-evolution of cities, evolving WorldViews, Visions & Mindsets in Urban Habitats and technology is presented in an integral framework.
Integral theory is simply explained as it relates to these themes see UH 2 & UH 3 for more detail.
These volumes are part of an ongoing series of guides to integrally inform practitioners.
A case study analysis on digital convergent design: Skynet Platformdi8it
This document presents the results of a case study analysis on the SkyNet digital convergent design platform. The study employed structured interviews to survey people's attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors regarding convergent services. Key findings include:
1) Participants were most likely to engage with interactive TV features directly related to enhancing TV content experience, such as getting additional information about shows.
2) Internet-based interactive services saw less usage, suggesting people view TV as primarily for passive viewing.
3) Exposure to interactive features through devices like Sky+ boxes increased likelihood of using interactivity.
4) Constraints like slow performance or disrupting the TV experience reduced openness to interactivity. Participants preferred features that
This is a second take on a philosophical understanding of governance, from the point of view of knowledge and power. Here I try to understand the concept and what's it for using three main thinkers: Habermas, Foucault and Merleau-Ponty. While I claim that this is not cherry-picking of concepts, the truth is that there is much more to be said about governance from the point of view of knowledge formation.
The document summarizes Per Linde's intervention at a conference on smart cities. It discusses projects from important European cities aimed at creating more human-centered smart cities. Specifically, it outlines a presentation on the Malmö Living Lab project in Malmö, Sweden, which aims to uplift local identities, increase civic participation, and enhance public interaction through collaborative neighborhood initiatives and social innovation. The presentation describes the context, problems addressed, strategies used, solutions developed, and reflections on the project.
1) The document discusses the philosophical bases for universal design and the acceptability of implementing universal access principles in both the digital and physical world.
2) It argues that while access is seen as a core value and right in the digital world, there is more reluctance to implement access universally in the physical world.
3) The document advocates applying the emerging values of the digital age like facilitation, transparency, collaboration, and end-user design to promoting universal access in the material world to make physical environments accessible to all.
The document discusses the goals and challenges of the ESSENCE project, which aims to develop online tools to facilitate structured analysis and dialogue around global issues like climate change. It notes that while argument mapping tools exist, they can be difficult for most users and lack incentives for both creation and use of arguments. The document advocates taking a socio-technical systems approach to develop tool systems tailored to specific collaborative communities, by understanding user goals, roles, and collaboration patterns in their unique context of use.
Are there ways in which we could use new smart technologies to aid the shift to a participative democracy rather then merely increasing passive consumption?
Digital Texts scholarly communication in a digital networked ageTony Hirst
1. The document discusses scholarly communication and proposes that the traditional model of journal publications no longer adequately defines communication units.
2. It suggests moving towards more granular, participatory, and networked forms of publishing like open notebooks, living documents, and composite works that dynamically combine information from multiple sources.
3. Key aspects that could be rethought include the purpose and audience of publishing, units of publication beyond journal articles, and utilizing social features like version control, issue tracking, and peer review to facilitate ongoing scholarly discourse.
The document summarizes the Emerge project, which aimed to support the formation of an effective and sustainable community of practice around the Users and Innovation Development Model using Web 2.0 technologies. Over 28 months, Emerge used community development processes and social networking to provide professional development, stimulate collaboration between projects, and improve awareness of projects in a wider context. Going forward, Emerge hopes to become a user-centered social learning hub that amplifies the outputs, connections, and impact of individuals and networks interested in educational learning and teaching.
Societal Architecture and its promises for sustainable development Jan Goossenaerts
Mankind at a crossroads: virtuous development or vicious deterioration?
An interdependent journeys perspective
Accelerated localization of knowledge in “every journey”
Enablers for a talent explosion
Societal architecture as necessary capability
Restoring balances in the anthropocene
Information access driving transformation capacities - #xy2wiki
Online explorations
Open source tools and public standards
Wiki’s supporting #tagcoding; micro blogs
E-books
ElectroSmog SkillShare: Tools and Models for Online CollaborationEyebeam
Eyebeam participated in ElectroSmog, a new festival that revolves around the concept of Sustainable Immobility. The festival, which takes place simultaneously at many locations around the world, introduces and explores the concept of sustainable immobility in both theory and practice, with discussions, workshops, and performances taking place at each of the festival partners' home bases.
Agile Design and Collaborative Creativity in Web of ThingsMartin Mahaux
The document discusses agile design and collaborative creativity for socio-technical systems like the Web of Things. It argues that to drive sustainable innovation in these complex, fast-moving systems, an agile design approach is needed that incorporates collaboration through iterative experimental design with stakeholders. Creativity is defined as something that is both novel and useful. The document also discusses the role of participation, noting that it can lead to more sustainability if certain obstacles are mitigated, as it empowers people and revives democracy by opening up solution spaces to more viewpoints and concerns. However, it may be restricted to elites unless specific facilitation is provided, and individualism or tensions between amateurs and experts could still undermine participation's benefits.
Introduction to Strategic Doing for Community DevelopmentEd Morrison
Strategic Doing developed at a very granular level: working on the complex challenges within neighborhoods and communities. This paper explores how this new approach for developing strategy can be used to strengthen communities.
Similar to Co-Mapping Our Transition Towards Abundance For All & The Social Network We Truly Need (20)
International Upcycling Research Network advisory board meeting 4Kyungeun Sung
Slides used for the International Upcycling Research Network advisory board 4 (last one). The project is based at De Montfort University in Leicester, UK, and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Explore the essential graphic design tools and software that can elevate your creative projects. Discover industry favorites and innovative solutions for stunning design results.
Manual ISH (International Society of Hypertension)
Co-Mapping Our Transition Towards Abundance For All & The Social Network We Truly Need
1. “A network to unite them
for co-creating a world
where all can thrive”
Open Design Proposal
published on
transitionarchitecture.net
2. “seems like a really
sensitive and integrated
approach...”
Shared to key people
for discussion
and networks
by Michel Bauwens
(P2PFoundation)
Open Street Maps 2014 Zoom on suggested changes
3. Not
“...yet another social network”
Not
“...yet another mapping project”
Instead a powerful strategy and design
for truly empowering
what has already started.
Simple, comprehensive and peaceful.
To clarify this
is the most important challenge
to solve as inherent prejudice
towards this project
to make it heard.
5. Open Design Proposal:
An elaborated design
for how the open source network
that people choose instead
for-proft ones,
that unites and enables
them to co-create the change
we need ( far better )
can emerge project-based
as foundation/enabler for the
Open Movement
6. Open Design Proposal:
Complete foundational design.
The uniting project, to co-map
“Transitioning” directly on
Open Street Map,
generates a powerful
resource.
Using and contributing to it
Is efective education
for understanding in detail
“What Transitioning Is.”
7. Open Design Proposal:
Complete foundational design.
And holistic civic architecture:
Join in and co-improve best
4 you and All..
8. Presentation Structure:
A short description of the
“Uniting Project”
that generates a powerful
co-operation infra-structure,
Then a short outlook on
topics the book covers.
Finally a short outlook to
Social Network “features”
(more in the book)
9. The layers make a complex
puzzle – the diverse aspects
of transitioning -
easily understandable.
Contributors join a social network
that is better than all existing ones
as to all regular features and more.
It unites to enable, by design,
to co-operate
from local to global:
on realizing a higher mission in
swarm action.
10. The Open Social Network
with a mission
is is a (r)evolution key.
How harmless it seems
and in some ways is
is like silent “humour”-
how easy to realize,
how small the challenge;
How huge the possible efects.
If we build it.
It is constructive.
It is powerful.
And though foundation,
This is only the start.
11. Most powerful and “true”
Strategy:
Directly from and on
Open Street Maps
Led by the OSM community
and their ideal
global local co-education
community.
16. A short Transition Layer Overview
Sublayers and sub-sublayers allow to
“understand” single “categories” (layers)
1. Land Regeneration & Sustainable Agriculture
2. Shared Spaces
3. Transitioning Households
4. Green Energy & Transport
5. Ethical Economy
25. Layer 4
Sublayer 1: Clean Energy Providers
Features p2pEnergy solutions
in strategic combination with open designs
for green energy devices.
(Clean) Energy & Transport
37. Social Network
can fuently evolve
into
Open source civic
co-governance tool
This will be described
module by module
in further publications.
Co-Mapping & Social Network
= Module 1
41. Social Network – book gives short description of additional features & efects
Simple individual participation fow – groups & projects (flter)
42. Architecture leads to wholistic
Local-to-global civic transition perspective “news” contact
And possible direct involvement
For everyone
ranked by relevance for diferent aspects
43. default version w. wholistic access infographic → ranking of groups/projects