A brief history of open source in public sectorRob Dyke
A quick romp through the history of open source policies in the public sector, with a nod to the global before focusing on the UK Gov and in particular NHS IT
Digital sustainability of open source communitiesMatthias Stürmer
The document discusses the digital sustainability of open source communities. It defines digital sustainability as ensuring digital resources are accessible to current and future generations. An example given is the Voyager Golden Record, which included images and sounds stored in a format that future civilizations could potentially decode. Key elements for sustainable open source communities include good governance, a heterogeneous community of contributors from varied backgrounds, a nonprofit foundation to handle legal/community matters, commercial support through services, and opportunities for users.
OpenFisca is an open source software project that aims to simulate the French tax and social benefit system. It covers both taxes and benefits, allows for efficient simulations of individuals and families, and aims to be understandable. OpenFisca uses a directed acyclic graph and vectorized computations to efficiently simulate tax outcomes. It is used to improve public understanding of the tax system, design reforms, simulate personal situations, and understand the overall social system. During a hackathon, the developers worked on efficiently traversing and computing the graph, visualizing results, simplifying the graph for common situations, and transpilng the system to other languages like JavaScript.
This 3-day workshop brought together civil society participants from OGP countries to support each other in advancing open government. The objectives were to support civil society engagement during countries' OGP leadership roles and push the boundaries of the OGP initiative. Participants discussed maximizing the impact of chairmanships and steering committee roles. They developed advocacy strategies considering strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. The workshop also covered optimizing IRM reports, partnerships with governments, and ideas for supporting civil society involvement in upcoming regional OGP meetings.
Open Government in Agriculture and NutritiongodanSec
Ana Brandusescu (GODAN Secretariat) for the Open Government in Agriculture and Nutrition lightning talk session at the Open Government Partnership (OGP) in Mexico City, 28 October 2015.
Ukraine has been a member of the Open Government Partnership (OGP) since 2011. Its current action plan has 26 commitments related to access to information, civic engagement, e-government, and anti-corruption. The next plan should focus on implementing and enforcing laws passed. Despite political difficulties, Ukraine has made significant progress passing open government laws. It should participate in peer learning and exchange through OGP working groups and meetings to focus on areas like public procurement and reducing red tape.
A brief history of open source in public sectorRob Dyke
A quick romp through the history of open source policies in the public sector, with a nod to the global before focusing on the UK Gov and in particular NHS IT
Digital sustainability of open source communitiesMatthias Stürmer
The document discusses the digital sustainability of open source communities. It defines digital sustainability as ensuring digital resources are accessible to current and future generations. An example given is the Voyager Golden Record, which included images and sounds stored in a format that future civilizations could potentially decode. Key elements for sustainable open source communities include good governance, a heterogeneous community of contributors from varied backgrounds, a nonprofit foundation to handle legal/community matters, commercial support through services, and opportunities for users.
OpenFisca is an open source software project that aims to simulate the French tax and social benefit system. It covers both taxes and benefits, allows for efficient simulations of individuals and families, and aims to be understandable. OpenFisca uses a directed acyclic graph and vectorized computations to efficiently simulate tax outcomes. It is used to improve public understanding of the tax system, design reforms, simulate personal situations, and understand the overall social system. During a hackathon, the developers worked on efficiently traversing and computing the graph, visualizing results, simplifying the graph for common situations, and transpilng the system to other languages like JavaScript.
This 3-day workshop brought together civil society participants from OGP countries to support each other in advancing open government. The objectives were to support civil society engagement during countries' OGP leadership roles and push the boundaries of the OGP initiative. Participants discussed maximizing the impact of chairmanships and steering committee roles. They developed advocacy strategies considering strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. The workshop also covered optimizing IRM reports, partnerships with governments, and ideas for supporting civil society involvement in upcoming regional OGP meetings.
Open Government in Agriculture and NutritiongodanSec
Ana Brandusescu (GODAN Secretariat) for the Open Government in Agriculture and Nutrition lightning talk session at the Open Government Partnership (OGP) in Mexico City, 28 October 2015.
Ukraine has been a member of the Open Government Partnership (OGP) since 2011. Its current action plan has 26 commitments related to access to information, civic engagement, e-government, and anti-corruption. The next plan should focus on implementing and enforcing laws passed. Despite political difficulties, Ukraine has made significant progress passing open government laws. It should participate in peer learning and exchange through OGP working groups and meetings to focus on areas like public procurement and reducing red tape.
1) The first version of the Open Graph Protocol launched in 2010, allowing website owners to convert web pages into equivalent Facebook pages through Open Graph metadata and the Like button.
2) This enabled new possibilities like allowing a bookseller with 1 million pages to have 1 million associated Facebook pages to uniquely remarket to followers.
3) However, version 1 of the Open Graph Protocol remained largely unknown and underappreciated by marketers and was deprecated by Facebook in July 2012, removing the ability to remarket to page followers.
This special supplement includes nine articles produced for the Open Government Partnership. OGP is a new effort to foster greater transparency and accountability, improve governance, and increase civic engagement worldwide.
OGP Summit - Democracy Night - December 2016Etalab
This document describes a "Democracy Night" event held during the 2016 Open Government Partnership Summit. It provides instructions on how to participate in an online discussion platform to propose ideas on synchronizing democracy and digital technology, scaling citizen empowerment initiatives, and reshaping education. Various speakers provide perspectives on these topics. Participants are invited to propose ideas for a fictional candidate's platform on open government issues. The discussion aims to develop a collective program through participatory democracy.
Open Data Index presentation @ OGP Summit LondonChristian Villum
Open Data Index presentation @ the Open Government Partnership Summit London on Oct 31 2013. The Open Data Index is developed by the Open Knowledge Foundation (okfn.org) in collaboration with a global community.
Citizen Engagement and Technology are both pillars of OGPActiveCitizen
The document discusses two trends in open government - the positive trend of open government momentum and the negative trend of declining civic space and lack of trust. It also outlines the original concept of the Open Government Partnership (OGP) which aimed to build upon open government momentum by pushing for transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement. A key part of OGP is equal participation between governments and civil society in developing and monitoring national action plans.
The Open Government Partnership (OGP) is a multilateral initiative that aims to secure concrete commitments from governments to promote transparency, empower citizens, fight corruption, and harness new technologies to strengthen governance. To participate in OGP, countries must meet minimum eligibility criteria, develop country action plans with specific open government commitments through public consultation, and undergo independent reporting on their progress. OGP is overseen by a steering committee of governments and civil society organizations to encourage sharing of best practices among participating countries.
This document summarizes Tunisia's progress on 20 open governance commitments made as part of its OGP membership between 2014-2015. Key points:
- 80% of commitments were relevant to OGP values of access to information, citizen participation, and accountability.
- 20% of commitments saw substantial or limited completion. Areas of limited progress included anti-corruption laws, electronic petition platforms, and audit reports.
- Commitments around open data portals, e-participation platforms, and civil servant training showed some progress but require more development to ensure accessibility and meaningful participation.
- Overall, Tunisia made some steps forward in open governance but many commitments still require greater transparency, public participation, and follow through to
Open Government Partnership and Open Education PolicyNicole Allen
This document discusses using the Open Government Partnership (OGP) as a platform to advance open education policies. It provides examples of OGP national action plans from the US and Slovakia related to open educational resources and open access. The US commitments include workshops on open education policy, overseas pilot programs using OER, and an online skills academy. Slovakia's commitments involve identifying and releasing educational resources as OER, analyzing procurement processes, and establishing open access repositories. The document argues that open education supports efficient use of funds, access to knowledge, new technologies, and international cooperation. It suggests advocacy strategies like engaging champions and stakeholders.
Conferencia Datos Abiertos Regionales, Montevideo, 2013Christian Sifaqui
El documento describe los esfuerzos de la Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile para digitalizar y publicar datos legislativos y de otro tipo como datos abiertos enlazados (Linked Open Data). Se detalla el proceso de digitalización de documentos históricos como recortes de prensa y fichas de indización, y cómo los datos se publican usando estándares de la Web Semántica como URIs, RDF y enlaces para mejorar la interoperabilidad y permitir consultas complejas. El objetivo final es exponer y visualizar la información de una manera que
Romain lacombe open policy making - london 06-14Policy Lab
This document summarizes France's open policymaking efforts from 2011-2014, including establishing Etalab to coordinate open data initiatives, releasing key datasets on Data.gouv.fr, engaging with civil society, and expanding open data efforts to open government through initiatives like joining the Open Government Partnership. It also discusses some of the challenges of using open data and data-driven strategies to inform policymaking, such as lack of government data infrastructure, potential biases in data collection and use, and tensions with existing institutions as data collection becomes more distributed.
As part of the digital exchange 2016 (dgx2016) in Singapore, I presented the ways in which the French government experiments with data-driven public decisions.
OpenPlans is a nonprofit that informs and engages communities through civic journalism and open source software to make cities work better. It focuses on civic engagement, livable cities, open technologies, and community building. OpenPlans produces civic journalism through websites like Streetsblog and Streetfilms. It also works on open government strategies and technologies such as OpenMuni and helps cities open up their data. Additionally, OpenPlans develops open source software like OpenTripPlanner and GeoNode and contributes to projects like OneBusAway.
USA CENDI's Strategic Thinking About Openness for 2014 Carolina Rossini
The document discusses open government and open science from an international perspective. It notes that examples of citizen-driven open science are emerging rapidly, but that government policies and institutions have yet to fully embrace openness. It questions how citizen science and open government can best work together to address societal challenges.
This document discusses open data and its evolution. It begins by explaining why open data matters and how to implement it effectively through examples like the SARPAM project. While open data has promising benefits, evidence of its impact remains largely anecdotal. The document outlines how open data is evolving from Open Data 1.0's focus on releasing as much data as possible to Open Data 2.0's emphasis on high-quality, relevant data and linking it to solve real problems. Overall, the document advocates for using open data to empower people and unleash its full potential to create public value.
This document summarizes a report on growing a digital social innovation ecosystem in Europe. Some key findings include:
1) Digital technologies are well-suited to helping civic action by mobilizing communities, sharing resources, and spreading power. Examples of digital social innovations (DSI) range from social networks for health conditions to open data platforms.
2) The report identifies four main technological trends in DSI - open hardware, open networks, open data, and open knowledge. Examples like Safecast and OpenCorporates are provided.
3) Over 990 DSI organizations and 6,000 projects have been mapped. Most projects focus on education and participation. The network is still fragmented with few well-connected
Open Data And The Fight Against Corruption In FranceFrenchWeb.fr
France has taken steps to implement open data principles and increase transparency, adopting laws that aim to make data open by default, timely, accessible, and interoperable. However, full implementation of these principles faces challenges from cultural resistance to sharing information and a lack of technical infrastructure. While some anti-corruption datasets are available, like government budgets and procurement, anti-corruption is not a main priority of France's open data policy and impact has been limited. The report evaluates France's implementation of the G20 Open Data Principles and finds room for improvement, particularly in making more sensitive anti-corruption data openly available and using open data actively in the fight against corruption.
UN Global Pulse's 2016 annual report summarizes the organization's work to promote the use of big data for development and humanitarian purposes. In 2016, Global Pulse intensified efforts to leverage new data sources to support achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. It collaborated with UN agencies on 20 innovation projects using data from sources like social media, mobile phones, and satellite imagery. Global Pulse also worked to build an enabling environment for data innovation, strengthen partnerships, and accelerate adoption of ethical data use policies. The organization continued delivering capacity building and acting as a hub for stakeholders through its Pulse Labs in New York, Indonesia, and Uganda.
Presentation on Open Government Data Tools and Infrastructure for Citizen Engagement at the WSIS Forum, May 2012 in Geneva Switzerland.
See: http://groups.itu.int/wsis-forum2012/Agenda/DraftAgenda.aspx?se=43276
1) The first version of the Open Graph Protocol launched in 2010, allowing website owners to convert web pages into equivalent Facebook pages through Open Graph metadata and the Like button.
2) This enabled new possibilities like allowing a bookseller with 1 million pages to have 1 million associated Facebook pages to uniquely remarket to followers.
3) However, version 1 of the Open Graph Protocol remained largely unknown and underappreciated by marketers and was deprecated by Facebook in July 2012, removing the ability to remarket to page followers.
This special supplement includes nine articles produced for the Open Government Partnership. OGP is a new effort to foster greater transparency and accountability, improve governance, and increase civic engagement worldwide.
OGP Summit - Democracy Night - December 2016Etalab
This document describes a "Democracy Night" event held during the 2016 Open Government Partnership Summit. It provides instructions on how to participate in an online discussion platform to propose ideas on synchronizing democracy and digital technology, scaling citizen empowerment initiatives, and reshaping education. Various speakers provide perspectives on these topics. Participants are invited to propose ideas for a fictional candidate's platform on open government issues. The discussion aims to develop a collective program through participatory democracy.
Open Data Index presentation @ OGP Summit LondonChristian Villum
Open Data Index presentation @ the Open Government Partnership Summit London on Oct 31 2013. The Open Data Index is developed by the Open Knowledge Foundation (okfn.org) in collaboration with a global community.
Citizen Engagement and Technology are both pillars of OGPActiveCitizen
The document discusses two trends in open government - the positive trend of open government momentum and the negative trend of declining civic space and lack of trust. It also outlines the original concept of the Open Government Partnership (OGP) which aimed to build upon open government momentum by pushing for transparency, accountability, and citizen engagement. A key part of OGP is equal participation between governments and civil society in developing and monitoring national action plans.
The Open Government Partnership (OGP) is a multilateral initiative that aims to secure concrete commitments from governments to promote transparency, empower citizens, fight corruption, and harness new technologies to strengthen governance. To participate in OGP, countries must meet minimum eligibility criteria, develop country action plans with specific open government commitments through public consultation, and undergo independent reporting on their progress. OGP is overseen by a steering committee of governments and civil society organizations to encourage sharing of best practices among participating countries.
This document summarizes Tunisia's progress on 20 open governance commitments made as part of its OGP membership between 2014-2015. Key points:
- 80% of commitments were relevant to OGP values of access to information, citizen participation, and accountability.
- 20% of commitments saw substantial or limited completion. Areas of limited progress included anti-corruption laws, electronic petition platforms, and audit reports.
- Commitments around open data portals, e-participation platforms, and civil servant training showed some progress but require more development to ensure accessibility and meaningful participation.
- Overall, Tunisia made some steps forward in open governance but many commitments still require greater transparency, public participation, and follow through to
Open Government Partnership and Open Education PolicyNicole Allen
This document discusses using the Open Government Partnership (OGP) as a platform to advance open education policies. It provides examples of OGP national action plans from the US and Slovakia related to open educational resources and open access. The US commitments include workshops on open education policy, overseas pilot programs using OER, and an online skills academy. Slovakia's commitments involve identifying and releasing educational resources as OER, analyzing procurement processes, and establishing open access repositories. The document argues that open education supports efficient use of funds, access to knowledge, new technologies, and international cooperation. It suggests advocacy strategies like engaging champions and stakeholders.
Conferencia Datos Abiertos Regionales, Montevideo, 2013Christian Sifaqui
El documento describe los esfuerzos de la Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile para digitalizar y publicar datos legislativos y de otro tipo como datos abiertos enlazados (Linked Open Data). Se detalla el proceso de digitalización de documentos históricos como recortes de prensa y fichas de indización, y cómo los datos se publican usando estándares de la Web Semántica como URIs, RDF y enlaces para mejorar la interoperabilidad y permitir consultas complejas. El objetivo final es exponer y visualizar la información de una manera que
Romain lacombe open policy making - london 06-14Policy Lab
This document summarizes France's open policymaking efforts from 2011-2014, including establishing Etalab to coordinate open data initiatives, releasing key datasets on Data.gouv.fr, engaging with civil society, and expanding open data efforts to open government through initiatives like joining the Open Government Partnership. It also discusses some of the challenges of using open data and data-driven strategies to inform policymaking, such as lack of government data infrastructure, potential biases in data collection and use, and tensions with existing institutions as data collection becomes more distributed.
As part of the digital exchange 2016 (dgx2016) in Singapore, I presented the ways in which the French government experiments with data-driven public decisions.
OpenPlans is a nonprofit that informs and engages communities through civic journalism and open source software to make cities work better. It focuses on civic engagement, livable cities, open technologies, and community building. OpenPlans produces civic journalism through websites like Streetsblog and Streetfilms. It also works on open government strategies and technologies such as OpenMuni and helps cities open up their data. Additionally, OpenPlans develops open source software like OpenTripPlanner and GeoNode and contributes to projects like OneBusAway.
USA CENDI's Strategic Thinking About Openness for 2014 Carolina Rossini
The document discusses open government and open science from an international perspective. It notes that examples of citizen-driven open science are emerging rapidly, but that government policies and institutions have yet to fully embrace openness. It questions how citizen science and open government can best work together to address societal challenges.
This document discusses open data and its evolution. It begins by explaining why open data matters and how to implement it effectively through examples like the SARPAM project. While open data has promising benefits, evidence of its impact remains largely anecdotal. The document outlines how open data is evolving from Open Data 1.0's focus on releasing as much data as possible to Open Data 2.0's emphasis on high-quality, relevant data and linking it to solve real problems. Overall, the document advocates for using open data to empower people and unleash its full potential to create public value.
This document summarizes a report on growing a digital social innovation ecosystem in Europe. Some key findings include:
1) Digital technologies are well-suited to helping civic action by mobilizing communities, sharing resources, and spreading power. Examples of digital social innovations (DSI) range from social networks for health conditions to open data platforms.
2) The report identifies four main technological trends in DSI - open hardware, open networks, open data, and open knowledge. Examples like Safecast and OpenCorporates are provided.
3) Over 990 DSI organizations and 6,000 projects have been mapped. Most projects focus on education and participation. The network is still fragmented with few well-connected
Open Data And The Fight Against Corruption In FranceFrenchWeb.fr
France has taken steps to implement open data principles and increase transparency, adopting laws that aim to make data open by default, timely, accessible, and interoperable. However, full implementation of these principles faces challenges from cultural resistance to sharing information and a lack of technical infrastructure. While some anti-corruption datasets are available, like government budgets and procurement, anti-corruption is not a main priority of France's open data policy and impact has been limited. The report evaluates France's implementation of the G20 Open Data Principles and finds room for improvement, particularly in making more sensitive anti-corruption data openly available and using open data actively in the fight against corruption.
UN Global Pulse's 2016 annual report summarizes the organization's work to promote the use of big data for development and humanitarian purposes. In 2016, Global Pulse intensified efforts to leverage new data sources to support achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. It collaborated with UN agencies on 20 innovation projects using data from sources like social media, mobile phones, and satellite imagery. Global Pulse also worked to build an enabling environment for data innovation, strengthen partnerships, and accelerate adoption of ethical data use policies. The organization continued delivering capacity building and acting as a hub for stakeholders through its Pulse Labs in New York, Indonesia, and Uganda.
Presentation on Open Government Data Tools and Infrastructure for Citizen Engagement at the WSIS Forum, May 2012 in Geneva Switzerland.
See: http://groups.itu.int/wsis-forum2012/Agenda/DraftAgenda.aspx?se=43276
Global Pulse is playing a leading role in helping UN and other development partners adopt more agile processes powered by Big Data to meet the challenges of driving sustainable development in a Post-2015 world. Our initiative has been closely involved in shaping the discussion of a Post-2015 development “data revolution.”
Over the past year, we have focused our efforts on advocating for the responsible use of Big Data, building partnerships for access to real-time data sources, cutting edge data mining tools and data science expertise. At the country level, we continued to expand our network of Pulse Labs to strengthen national and regional capacity for using Big Data. We are pleased to have begun operating our first regional innovation hub in the vibrant East African technology scene with the opening of Pulse Lab Kampala in late 2013. In 2013, our portfolio of innovation projects involved more than 25 partner organizations including UNICEF, UN Development Programme (UNDP), World Food Programme (WFP) and World Health Organisation (WHO).
The Annual Report 2013 summarizes this activity and explains how the UN's data science labs operate and innovate.
Open Foreste Italiane - Crisis Camp Europe - Elena Rapisardi
This document summarizes Elena Rapisardi's work on the Open Foreste Italiane project, which used crowdsourcing and geolocated data to support forest fire preparedness and response in Italy. The project started in 2009 by gathering data from forest workers on Facebook. An Ushahidi platform was used to map this data. The project raised awareness of web tools and engaged volunteers, citizens, and institutions. Lessons learned include the need to commit institutions long-term, promote citizen participation, integrate platforms, increase digital literacy, and fundraise. The focus going forward is on preparedness through collaboration at all levels in between emergencies.
Ouishare’s 100 top articles on the collaborative economy in 2014OuiShare
This presentation features the most popular articles and news items that that were discussed and shared in the OuiShare community in 2014. They have been selected from our Facebook groups OuiShare Global and “en Français”, to highlight the most relevant conversations.
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.
This document discusses open data and transparency in the Basque Country. It notes that in 2010, the Basque Government committed to launching an open data portal called opendata.euskadi.net to release public sector information in reusable formats with open licenses. The main objectives of Open Data Euskadi are to generate value, promote government transparency, and enable interoperability between administrations by facilitating the creation of services using data from different agencies. The document also reviews the stages of open data development in the Basque Country.
Gi forum Raper Lessons of Open data from LondonJonathan Raper
The document discusses lessons learned from London's experience with open geodata and open data. It describes how open data has progressed through various "waves" of technology and societal changes. These include the rise of smartphones, expectations of digital government services, the economics of digital goods distribution, and open source philosophies. The document also outlines London's process of opening its transportation data, challenges faced, and implications of open data including opportunities for innovation but also needs for ongoing support.
When the Global Pulse initiative was launched by the UN Secretary-General in late 2009, its mission to use real-time and other non- traditional data sources in development and humanitarian action was groundbreaking. 2014 was a landmark year for embracing the importance of data analysis in achieving sustainable development. Throughout the year, the "Post-2015 data revolution" agenda was taken-up in governments, public sector and civil society organisations.
Over the past year, Pulse Labs in New York, Jakarta and Indonesia have supported the growth of a thriving community of practice, redefined the data innovation landscape and demonstrated how real-time data can play a role in supporting decision-makers and shaping public service delivery. With 25 joint data innovation projects implemented over the year, in partnership with 25 UN & Govt innovation project partners, 30 private sector collaborators and academics from 26 institutions, Global Pulse is contrbuting to a body of evidence that demonstrates how big data analysis can complement traditional approaches to development planning and monitoring.
Global Pulse's Annual Report 2014 highlights big data innovation projects carried out over the past year, and new milestones in the evolution of a "big data for development" ecosystem.
Open Data & ODI Overview 2014-11 (long version)theODI
This document discusses how open data can help address global challenges like sustaining the world's population. It outlines the importance of social, environmental, and economic open data. Open data can drive transparency, innovation, and efficiency. The Open Data Institute (ODI) works to build the global open data sector through training, standards, tools, and applying research to generate real-world impact from open data.
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This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Why Psychological Safety Matters for Software Teams - ACE 2024 - Ben Linders.pdfBen Linders
Psychological safety in teams is important; team members must feel safe and able to communicate and collaborate effectively to deliver value. It’s also necessary to build long-lasting teams since things will happen and relationships will be strained.
But, how safe is a team? How can we determine if there are any factors that make the team unsafe or have an impact on the team’s culture?
In this mini-workshop, we’ll play games for psychological safety and team culture utilizing a deck of coaching cards, The Psychological Safety Cards. We will learn how to use gamification to gain a better understanding of what’s going on in teams. Individuals share what they have learned from working in teams, what has impacted the team’s safety and culture, and what has led to positive change.
Different game formats will be played in groups in parallel. Examples are an ice-breaker to get people talking about psychological safety, a constellation where people take positions about aspects of psychological safety in their team or organization, and collaborative card games where people work together to create an environment that fosters psychological safety.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Suzanne Lagerweij - Influence Without Power - Why Empathy is Your Best Friend...Suzanne Lagerweij
This is a workshop about communication and collaboration. We will experience how we can analyze the reasons for resistance to change (exercise 1) and practice how to improve our conversation style and be more in control and effective in the way we communicate (exercise 2).
This session will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
Abstract:
Let’s talk about powerful conversations! We all know how to lead a constructive conversation, right? Then why is it so difficult to have those conversations with people at work, especially those in powerful positions that show resistance to change?
Learning to control and direct conversations takes understanding and practice.
We can combine our innate empathy with our analytical skills to gain a deeper understanding of complex situations at work. Join this session to learn how to prepare for difficult conversations and how to improve our agile conversations in order to be more influential without power. We will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
In the session you will experience how preparing and reflecting on your conversation can help you be more influential at work. You will learn how to communicate more effectively with the people needed to achieve positive change. You will leave with a self-revised version of a difficult conversation and a practical model to use when you get back to work.
Come learn more on how to become a real influencer!
Collapsing Narratives: Exploring Non-Linearity • a micro report by Rosie WellsRosie Wells
Insight: In a landscape where traditional narrative structures are giving way to fragmented and non-linear forms of storytelling, there lies immense potential for creativity and exploration.
'Collapsing Narratives: Exploring Non-Linearity' is a micro report from Rosie Wells.
Rosie Wells is an Arts & Cultural Strategist uniquely positioned at the intersection of grassroots and mainstream storytelling.
Their work is focused on developing meaningful and lasting connections that can drive social change.
Please download this presentation to enjoy the hyperlinks!
Mastering the Concepts Tested in the Databricks Certified Data Engineer Assoc...SkillCertProExams
• For a full set of 760+ questions. Go to
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• SkillCertPro offers detailed explanations to each question which helps to understand the concepts better.
• It is recommended to score above 85% in SkillCertPro exams before attempting a real exam.
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This presentation by Nathaniel Lane, Associate Professor in Economics at Oxford University, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
7. Parlement ouvert
Open Parliament
Les journalistes dans le PGO
Journalism in OGP
La société civile francophone
Francophone civil society
La Nuit de la Démocratie
The Democracy Night
4 points de vue
17. Open public procurement
Hivos Open Contracting
Open Contracting Partnership
Institute for Development of Freedom of Information
Georgian Young Lawyers Association
Development Gateway
TransparencyI nternational Ukraine
Transparency International
Open data Institute
One Campaign
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Young Innovations
Young innovation
Open Knowledge Foundation Germany
Public and Private Development Centre (PPDC)
Brazil
Chile
France
Mexico
Romania
Nigeria
Ukraine
Sri Lanka
Uruguay
Honduras
Paraguay
Nigeria
United
Kingdom
Columbia
#1
18. #2
Ending abuse of anonymous
companies
United Kingdom
France
Ukraine
Paraguay
Unites States
Madrid City Council
Transparency International Ukraine
Transparency International Indonesia
Publish What you Pay Indonesia
OpenOwnership
Publish What You Pay
One Campaign
Access Info Europe
Open Knowledge Foundation Germany
19. Harnessing the Data revolution for
sustainable development and
climate risk resilience
Mexico
Macedonia
France
Philippines
Kenya
Sierra Leone
Canada
United States
of America
Colombia
Peru
Mexico
The City of
Austin
World Ressources Institute
Climate Change Network Nigeria (CCN-Nigeria)
Open Climate Data Repository
GODAN
Development Gateway
osver polo carrasco: ??
The Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT)
The Global Partnership for Sustainable Development
Data
The Open Data Charter
The Group of Earth Observations
World Meteorological Organization
The Climate Reality Project
Moja Global
Center for Enterprise Open Data
Circle of Blue
Digital Globe
#12
20. Creating an open source
software policy
France
Bulgaria
United States
UK
The City of
Austin
LibreItalia
The Nexa Center for Internet & Society
(DAUIN, Politecnico di Torino, ITALY)
Youth Network for Reform (YONER-LIBERIA)
The Open Data Institute
#19
22. Manish Bapna,
Vice-Président exécutif et Directeur général de l’ONG World
Resources Institute
Executive Vice President and managing director
Jean-Vincent Placé,
Secrétaire d’Etat chargé de la Réforme de l’Etat et de la
Simplification, France
State Secretary in charge of State Reform and simplification