[2010] Case Study: e-Cabinet - Albania Information Society in Albania - Endr...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses the current state of information and communications technology (ICT) in Albania. It provides statistics on ICT indicators like internet penetration, mobile phone usage, and broadband adoption that show significant growth between 2002 and 2010. It then describes the National Agency on Information Society, which was founded in 2007 to guide the implementation of Albania's national ICT strategy and promote e-government initiatives to improve transparency and public services. Finally, it notes that Albania aims to adopt a service-oriented architecture for government to develop user-centered and integrated e-services across different agencies.
[2010] Microsoft Central and East Euope in the Public Sector - Dejan Cvetkovice-Democracy Conference
The document discusses Microsoft's Citizen Service Platform and its commitments to governments. It aims to help governments free up resources and serve citizens more effectively through innovative, secure, scalable and cost-effective cloud solutions. These solutions allow governments to respond, act and communicate with citizens virtually anytime through services, information and two-way conversations. Microsoft also seeks to create jobs, workforce skills and expand educational opportunities to drive national competitiveness. The document outlines key government challenges and how Microsoft's cloud services, open platform and partner ecosystem can help improve government interactions with citizens through online portals and mobile access to public services.
[2011] SPACE - A Computer Aided Environment for e Government and eBusiness ag...e-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'SPACE - A Computer Aided Environment for e Government and eBusiness agility' by Prof. Amjad Umar, Professor and Director, Harrisburg University of Science and Technology
The document discusses concepts related to customer relationship management (CRM). It covers emerging marketing trends, the shift from a product-focused to customer-focused paradigm, CRM capabilities for sales, marketing and service, and characteristics of front and back office CRM processes. It also addresses identifying goals of CRM and how CRM benefits companies by helping retain profitable customers and acquire new customers.
eDemocracy2012 Simon Delakorda Political_informatics-how_should_civil_society...e-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the democratic risks of digital governance, including technocratic e-governance and fake e-democracy. It examines two cases - a government proposal portal that received over 1,000 citizen proposals but only accepted 11, and an e-democracy subportal that provided weak transparency. This has led to consequences like public disappointment, distrust in institutions, and alternative informal participation channels. The document argues that NGOs can help address these issues by advocating for transparency, expertise, and partnership with governments in areas like pilots, participatory design, and community building to support more citizen-driven e-participation.
[2010] Side panel 2: Official Journals Compliance in the Framework of Corpora...e-Democracy Conference
This document discusses compliance in the framework of corporate governance. It provides an overview of key corporate governance concepts like what corporate governance is and its relationship to corporate management and oversight. It defines compliance and explains why it is important today. It discusses how compliance relates to the integrated governance, risk management and compliance (GRC) framework at the company level. It outlines who is responsible for compliance in a company and how companies can integrate compliance into their business conduct and processes, including the role of the Chief Compliance Officer.
[2010] e-Participation - better parliament-to-citizen communication - by Simo...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses e-participation and its role in better communication between parliaments and citizens. It examines different models of democracy and the ICT tools suited to each. Case studies from Slovenia and Macedonia show how parliaments can provide information access, discussion forums, and consultations with citizens online. The document also outlines developments in e-participation across the Southeast European region and argues for a regional strategy to address common issues and narrow gaps compared to EU countries.
[2010] Case Study: e-Cabinet - Albania Information Society in Albania - Endr...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses the current state of information and communications technology (ICT) in Albania. It provides statistics on ICT indicators like internet penetration, mobile phone usage, and broadband adoption that show significant growth between 2002 and 2010. It then describes the National Agency on Information Society, which was founded in 2007 to guide the implementation of Albania's national ICT strategy and promote e-government initiatives to improve transparency and public services. Finally, it notes that Albania aims to adopt a service-oriented architecture for government to develop user-centered and integrated e-services across different agencies.
[2010] Microsoft Central and East Euope in the Public Sector - Dejan Cvetkovice-Democracy Conference
The document discusses Microsoft's Citizen Service Platform and its commitments to governments. It aims to help governments free up resources and serve citizens more effectively through innovative, secure, scalable and cost-effective cloud solutions. These solutions allow governments to respond, act and communicate with citizens virtually anytime through services, information and two-way conversations. Microsoft also seeks to create jobs, workforce skills and expand educational opportunities to drive national competitiveness. The document outlines key government challenges and how Microsoft's cloud services, open platform and partner ecosystem can help improve government interactions with citizens through online portals and mobile access to public services.
[2011] SPACE - A Computer Aided Environment for e Government and eBusiness ag...e-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'SPACE - A Computer Aided Environment for e Government and eBusiness agility' by Prof. Amjad Umar, Professor and Director, Harrisburg University of Science and Technology
The document discusses concepts related to customer relationship management (CRM). It covers emerging marketing trends, the shift from a product-focused to customer-focused paradigm, CRM capabilities for sales, marketing and service, and characteristics of front and back office CRM processes. It also addresses identifying goals of CRM and how CRM benefits companies by helping retain profitable customers and acquire new customers.
eDemocracy2012 Simon Delakorda Political_informatics-how_should_civil_society...e-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the democratic risks of digital governance, including technocratic e-governance and fake e-democracy. It examines two cases - a government proposal portal that received over 1,000 citizen proposals but only accepted 11, and an e-democracy subportal that provided weak transparency. This has led to consequences like public disappointment, distrust in institutions, and alternative informal participation channels. The document argues that NGOs can help address these issues by advocating for transparency, expertise, and partnership with governments in areas like pilots, participatory design, and community building to support more citizen-driven e-participation.
[2010] Side panel 2: Official Journals Compliance in the Framework of Corpora...e-Democracy Conference
This document discusses compliance in the framework of corporate governance. It provides an overview of key corporate governance concepts like what corporate governance is and its relationship to corporate management and oversight. It defines compliance and explains why it is important today. It discusses how compliance relates to the integrated governance, risk management and compliance (GRC) framework at the company level. It outlines who is responsible for compliance in a company and how companies can integrate compliance into their business conduct and processes, including the role of the Chief Compliance Officer.
[2010] e-Participation - better parliament-to-citizen communication - by Simo...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses e-participation and its role in better communication between parliaments and citizens. It examines different models of democracy and the ICT tools suited to each. Case studies from Slovenia and Macedonia show how parliaments can provide information access, discussion forums, and consultations with citizens online. The document also outlines developments in e-participation across the Southeast European region and argues for a regional strategy to address common issues and narrow gaps compared to EU countries.
Social media has become an important tool for politicians to connect with constituents. It allows for two-way communication and sharing of ideas rather than just one-way messaging. Politicians can now get direct feedback from voters and personalize their brands online through platforms like Facebook and Twitter. Barack Obama successfully used these new methods in his 2008 presidential campaign to engage more voters, especially young people, which helped spread his message and give him an advantage over other candidates. For civic organizations and politicians to remain competitive, they must establish active presences on social media and consistently provide new and engaging content to interact with their online audiences.
The document discusses developing ICT strategy in Albania to increase transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement. It outlines:
- The objective to review and coordinate commitments for an information-based economy through coordinated execution of responsibilities.
- Examples of open government initiatives including publishing ministry expenses online and making property records digital.
- While local governments show willingness to develop e-governance, most still lack websites and staff dedicated to communications.
- Good practices using ICT at the local level include financial planning tools, e-services, and transforming governance through interactivity and online transactions. Further replication and standards are needed to speed digital transformation.
Pavle Sazdov is a member of parliament representing the electoral district of North and South America. He uses various social media and communication tools to stay connected with the estimated 500,000 Macedonians living abroad in North and South America. This includes maintaining a Facebook page, Twitter account, and building a database of over 80,000 email addresses. He sends out a monthly newsletter and uses polls on social media to get feedback from constituents on important issues and legislation. Sazdov plans to further improve access to constituents by integrating social media with the Assembly's website and allowing for more two-way dialogue.
This document discusses using parliamentary open data to create an interactive service for research and development purposes. It describes various types of parliamentary data that could be used, such as draft laws, reports, and transcripts from meetings. The service would involve structuring unstructured transcript text using suffix trees and visualizing the data through word clouds and word trees. This would allow analysis of word distributions and comparisons over time. The goal is to enable greater transparency, participation, and information sharing with citizens by transforming and aggregating internal parliamentary data sources.
eDemocracy2012 Marija Sazdevski_Government_mirror_public_participation_in_leg...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses public participation in the legislative process in Macedonia. It outlines the legal framework which requires ministries to publish draft laws for public comment and to respond to comments received. It also describes a monitoring project that assessed different government bodies on their communication environment and support for public participation in legislation based on a questionnaire. Most bodies scored moderately well and provided some online information and means for public involvement, though few funded civil society engagement or evaluation of public impact.
Compliance is important for companies and institutions to ensure they act in accordance with applicable laws, regulations, industry standards, and internal policies. It is a responsibility shared by all individuals in an organization from employees to senior management and boards of directors. Establishing an effective compliance system provides numerous benefits including strengthening the business, ensuring continuity by reducing legal and regulatory actions, improving process quality, protecting reputation, optimizing operations, and boosting employee morale. Non-compliance can result in significant costs from civil and criminal penalties to financial and reputational damage.
eDemocracy2012 Jani Makraduli Policy_and_program_life-cycle_managemente-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the changing role of politicians and policy in democracy. It notes that public pressure and expectations on politicians are greater than ever, and that political engagement is becoming more ad hoc and less tied to party affiliation. Technological trends are interacting with society in ways that challenge traditional democratic structures and increase interconnectivity. This requires finding new ways to manage continuous change and involve citizens through more participatory and horizontal approaches to policymaking. The document examines gaps in knowledge and openness between citizens and politicians regarding technology and parliamentary processes. It argues that parliaments must promote more openness and transparency to engage citizens and enable two-way communication.
The document discusses innovative ways to increase civic participation through social media and the internet. It outlines how social media allows for easier recruitment, mobilization, and messaging. It also notes that social media helps reach new demographics like young people and digital natives. However, it cautions that social media requires experimentation and careful management of reputation risks and potential for conversations to move rapidly beyond control.
eDemocracy2012 Igor Andonovski_Policy_and_program_life-cycle_managemente-Democracy Conference
This document discusses policy and program life-cycle management. It describes monitoring and performance measurement as an integral part of the legislative process. It also provides examples of supranational, national, regional, sector-specific, economic, environmental, and social programs and strategies. Finally, it discusses Nextsense's integrated legislative information system solutions for central program management, monitoring, and EU legislative approximation.
This document discusses the phases of implementation of constituency offices in Macedonia and their use of information and communication technologies (ICT). It notes that from 2003-2006, the initial phase established 46 constituency offices equipped with PCs but no internet access. From 2007-2008/9, the second phase aimed to establish 65-75 offices, each provided with a casework tracking database and internet access. From 2009-2012, the final phase's goal was 75 offices using the database and internet through the constituency office management database and website "My Representative." The document emphasizes how ICT has increased transparency, participation and accountability by allowing online citizen participation in decision making and awareness of MPs' activities.
The document discusses ways to open up parliaments and make them more transparent and accessible to citizens. It outlines four key areas for improvement: promoting a culture of openness, making parliamentary information more transparent, easing public access to information, and enabling electronic communication of information to engage more citizens. The goal is to strengthen democracy by making legislatures more open and accountable.
eDemocracy2012 Alexander Prosser_Legal_compliance_in_a_united_europee-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the need for a legal compliance tool to help citizens, civil society groups, and businesses navigate the increasingly complex legal landscape of a united Europe. It notes that while EU legislation takes the form of directives that must be enacted into national law, citizens and organizations are becoming more cross-border. This raises the risk of inadvertent non-compliance. The document proposes a software as a service tool that would profile laws and bills across countries, alert users to changes, and enable checks of legal compliance. It argues such a tool could help navigate complexity while being a sustainable business model.
This document outlines the MyLegislative Compliance (MyCompliance) project. The project aims to establish a software toolkit to improve assessment of legal compliance for businesses and citizens. It will provide regular updates on laws and bylaws and ensure compliance through a legal management platform. The toolkit will identify applicable laws, maintain compliance checklists, and provide notifications of legal changes. It will measure compliance through scorecards and indexes. The goals are to improve rule of law, public administration effectiveness, transparency, and citizen participation. Challenges include developing assessment tools and identifying funding. Benefits for businesses include reducing risks, exposure to penalties, and costs of non-compliance.
[2011] Opening of the e-Democracy Conference 2011 - Vasko Kronevskie-Democracy Conference
The e-Democracy Conference 2011 was held in Macedonia from September 26-27. [1] The conference focused on how information and communication technologies (ICT) can improve democracy and governance. [2] Over the two days, panels discussed topics such as using ICT for government transformation, legislation management solutions, e-democracy, e-participation, and open government. [3] Keynote speakers included government ministers and representatives from international organizations. The agenda aimed to provide insights on ongoing e-democracy initiatives and encourage collaboration across sectors.
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'e-Participation' by Simon Delakorda, M. Sc. Institute for Electronic Participation | Twitter: @SimonDelakorda
[2011] Next Generation e-Government: Transformation into Open Government - Ol...e-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Next Generation e-Government: Transformation into Open Government' by Oleg Petrov, Program Coordinator at World Bank
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Open Government is here' by Jeff
Kaplan, Managing Director, Open ePolicy Solutions | Twitter: @jeffkaplan88
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Citizen techology and Open Government' by Jared Ford, NDI Program Manager on the ICT team | Twitter: @jdeepford
[2011] Integrated Legislation Information Management System - Igor Andonovskie-Democracy Conference
The document discusses how ICT can be used as a tool to transform government. It provides examples of how ICT can facilitate dialogue between the public and government, empower citizens, and encourage participation from groups like young people. The document then discusses e-democracy and how technology can be used to reverse cynicism about government but is not a replacement for other aspects of democracy. It presents examples of how an integrated legislative information system can support different parts of the legislative and policy process, including e-Cabinet, e-Parliament, and benefits like improved transparency, participation and efficiency.
[2011] Citizen services and collaboration in the 21st Century - Holger Schreyere-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Citizen services and collaboration in the 21st Century' by Holger Schreyer, Director, Sales Engineering - EMEA Central Kofax Deutschland AG
Social media has become an important tool for politicians to connect with constituents. It allows for two-way communication and sharing of ideas rather than just one-way messaging. Politicians can now get direct feedback from voters and personalize their brands online through platforms like Facebook and Twitter. Barack Obama successfully used these new methods in his 2008 presidential campaign to engage more voters, especially young people, which helped spread his message and give him an advantage over other candidates. For civic organizations and politicians to remain competitive, they must establish active presences on social media and consistently provide new and engaging content to interact with their online audiences.
The document discusses developing ICT strategy in Albania to increase transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement. It outlines:
- The objective to review and coordinate commitments for an information-based economy through coordinated execution of responsibilities.
- Examples of open government initiatives including publishing ministry expenses online and making property records digital.
- While local governments show willingness to develop e-governance, most still lack websites and staff dedicated to communications.
- Good practices using ICT at the local level include financial planning tools, e-services, and transforming governance through interactivity and online transactions. Further replication and standards are needed to speed digital transformation.
Pavle Sazdov is a member of parliament representing the electoral district of North and South America. He uses various social media and communication tools to stay connected with the estimated 500,000 Macedonians living abroad in North and South America. This includes maintaining a Facebook page, Twitter account, and building a database of over 80,000 email addresses. He sends out a monthly newsletter and uses polls on social media to get feedback from constituents on important issues and legislation. Sazdov plans to further improve access to constituents by integrating social media with the Assembly's website and allowing for more two-way dialogue.
This document discusses using parliamentary open data to create an interactive service for research and development purposes. It describes various types of parliamentary data that could be used, such as draft laws, reports, and transcripts from meetings. The service would involve structuring unstructured transcript text using suffix trees and visualizing the data through word clouds and word trees. This would allow analysis of word distributions and comparisons over time. The goal is to enable greater transparency, participation, and information sharing with citizens by transforming and aggregating internal parliamentary data sources.
eDemocracy2012 Marija Sazdevski_Government_mirror_public_participation_in_leg...e-Democracy Conference
The document discusses public participation in the legislative process in Macedonia. It outlines the legal framework which requires ministries to publish draft laws for public comment and to respond to comments received. It also describes a monitoring project that assessed different government bodies on their communication environment and support for public participation in legislation based on a questionnaire. Most bodies scored moderately well and provided some online information and means for public involvement, though few funded civil society engagement or evaluation of public impact.
Compliance is important for companies and institutions to ensure they act in accordance with applicable laws, regulations, industry standards, and internal policies. It is a responsibility shared by all individuals in an organization from employees to senior management and boards of directors. Establishing an effective compliance system provides numerous benefits including strengthening the business, ensuring continuity by reducing legal and regulatory actions, improving process quality, protecting reputation, optimizing operations, and boosting employee morale. Non-compliance can result in significant costs from civil and criminal penalties to financial and reputational damage.
eDemocracy2012 Jani Makraduli Policy_and_program_life-cycle_managemente-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the changing role of politicians and policy in democracy. It notes that public pressure and expectations on politicians are greater than ever, and that political engagement is becoming more ad hoc and less tied to party affiliation. Technological trends are interacting with society in ways that challenge traditional democratic structures and increase interconnectivity. This requires finding new ways to manage continuous change and involve citizens through more participatory and horizontal approaches to policymaking. The document examines gaps in knowledge and openness between citizens and politicians regarding technology and parliamentary processes. It argues that parliaments must promote more openness and transparency to engage citizens and enable two-way communication.
The document discusses innovative ways to increase civic participation through social media and the internet. It outlines how social media allows for easier recruitment, mobilization, and messaging. It also notes that social media helps reach new demographics like young people and digital natives. However, it cautions that social media requires experimentation and careful management of reputation risks and potential for conversations to move rapidly beyond control.
eDemocracy2012 Igor Andonovski_Policy_and_program_life-cycle_managemente-Democracy Conference
This document discusses policy and program life-cycle management. It describes monitoring and performance measurement as an integral part of the legislative process. It also provides examples of supranational, national, regional, sector-specific, economic, environmental, and social programs and strategies. Finally, it discusses Nextsense's integrated legislative information system solutions for central program management, monitoring, and EU legislative approximation.
This document discusses the phases of implementation of constituency offices in Macedonia and their use of information and communication technologies (ICT). It notes that from 2003-2006, the initial phase established 46 constituency offices equipped with PCs but no internet access. From 2007-2008/9, the second phase aimed to establish 65-75 offices, each provided with a casework tracking database and internet access. From 2009-2012, the final phase's goal was 75 offices using the database and internet through the constituency office management database and website "My Representative." The document emphasizes how ICT has increased transparency, participation and accountability by allowing online citizen participation in decision making and awareness of MPs' activities.
The document discusses ways to open up parliaments and make them more transparent and accessible to citizens. It outlines four key areas for improvement: promoting a culture of openness, making parliamentary information more transparent, easing public access to information, and enabling electronic communication of information to engage more citizens. The goal is to strengthen democracy by making legislatures more open and accountable.
eDemocracy2012 Alexander Prosser_Legal_compliance_in_a_united_europee-Democracy Conference
This document discusses the need for a legal compliance tool to help citizens, civil society groups, and businesses navigate the increasingly complex legal landscape of a united Europe. It notes that while EU legislation takes the form of directives that must be enacted into national law, citizens and organizations are becoming more cross-border. This raises the risk of inadvertent non-compliance. The document proposes a software as a service tool that would profile laws and bills across countries, alert users to changes, and enable checks of legal compliance. It argues such a tool could help navigate complexity while being a sustainable business model.
This document outlines the MyLegislative Compliance (MyCompliance) project. The project aims to establish a software toolkit to improve assessment of legal compliance for businesses and citizens. It will provide regular updates on laws and bylaws and ensure compliance through a legal management platform. The toolkit will identify applicable laws, maintain compliance checklists, and provide notifications of legal changes. It will measure compliance through scorecards and indexes. The goals are to improve rule of law, public administration effectiveness, transparency, and citizen participation. Challenges include developing assessment tools and identifying funding. Benefits for businesses include reducing risks, exposure to penalties, and costs of non-compliance.
[2011] Opening of the e-Democracy Conference 2011 - Vasko Kronevskie-Democracy Conference
The e-Democracy Conference 2011 was held in Macedonia from September 26-27. [1] The conference focused on how information and communication technologies (ICT) can improve democracy and governance. [2] Over the two days, panels discussed topics such as using ICT for government transformation, legislation management solutions, e-democracy, e-participation, and open government. [3] Keynote speakers included government ministers and representatives from international organizations. The agenda aimed to provide insights on ongoing e-democracy initiatives and encourage collaboration across sectors.
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'e-Participation' by Simon Delakorda, M. Sc. Institute for Electronic Participation | Twitter: @SimonDelakorda
[2011] Next Generation e-Government: Transformation into Open Government - Ol...e-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Next Generation e-Government: Transformation into Open Government' by Oleg Petrov, Program Coordinator at World Bank
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Open Government is here' by Jeff
Kaplan, Managing Director, Open ePolicy Solutions | Twitter: @jeffkaplan88
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Citizen techology and Open Government' by Jared Ford, NDI Program Manager on the ICT team | Twitter: @jdeepford
[2011] Integrated Legislation Information Management System - Igor Andonovskie-Democracy Conference
The document discusses how ICT can be used as a tool to transform government. It provides examples of how ICT can facilitate dialogue between the public and government, empower citizens, and encourage participation from groups like young people. The document then discusses e-democracy and how technology can be used to reverse cynicism about government but is not a replacement for other aspects of democracy. It presents examples of how an integrated legislative information system can support different parts of the legislative and policy process, including e-Cabinet, e-Parliament, and benefits like improved transparency, participation and efficiency.
[2011] Citizen services and collaboration in the 21st Century - Holger Schreyere-Democracy Conference
e-Democracy Conference 2011 presentation titled 'Citizen services and collaboration in the 21st Century' by Holger Schreyer, Director, Sales Engineering - EMEA Central Kofax Deutschland AG
1. TRANSPERANCY IN THE DECISION-MAKING
PROCESS IN SLOVENIA
Tina Divjak, Head of Advocacy CNVOS
2. MIRROR TO THE GOVERNMENT – WHY
WE MONITORED?
• To see how public participation works in practice
• How by-laws contribute to better public participation
• Where (which stage, which ministry) are the biggest problems
that need to be addressed
3. WHAT WE MONITORED?
• The general communication environment (general
mechanisms for the inclusion of civil society: publication of
information and documents, organizations of public
consultations, e-participation tools, …)
• The support environment for the inclusion of civil society
(contact person for NGOs, financial support, inclusion of NGO
representatives in the working bodies)
• The legislation preparation procedure (standards of
consultations for 33 acts, 17 state bodies in 2009 and 53 acts,
19 state bodies in 2010)
Government’s bodies’ evaluation of the responses they
received from civil society
4. RESULTS
• Comparison between 2006 - 2009 and 2009 – 2010 (scale: 1 –
5)
• Between 2006 and 2009: same level of inclusion (relatively
low)
• Between 2009 and 2010: improvement seen (overall score: +
0.40, generel environment: + 0.56, legislation procedure; +
0.90)
7. RESULTS FOR E-PARTICIPATION TOOLS (2010)
• The government body proposing the legislation either on its
website or via an e-newsletter:
• publishes details and information about public participation in specific procedures
(3)
• publishes the proposals and comments made by the public about the work of the
proposing government body (1)
• publishes answers and explanations with regard to the proposals put forward by
the interested members of public (3)
• publishes a list of frequently asked questions and answers concerning public
participation in specific cases (1)
• uses structured e-questionnaires to gauge public opinion (1)
• enables interested members of the public to sign up to a registry (1)
• emails interested members of the public with electronic news (4)
• organises public debates (via forums, chats, blogs) and prepares and publishes the
outcomes of these debates (1)
• organises public events (web conferences, e-forums) (1)
8. RECOMMENDATIONS
• Contact person for NGOs at each Ministry
• Identification of key stakeholders and inclusion at the
early stage
• Summary reports
• Secretariat general of the Government as guardian of
public participation
• Increase of e-participation tools
9. IMPACT
• Big media coverage
• Report still used as a reference
• Monitoring will be repeated every couple of years
• In between: counter of breaches of the Resolution on
legislative regulation (breaches of publication and
deadlines)