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Greetings,

Below is new article that helps complete the picture for those
interested in using information and communication technologies to
meet public challenges.

It is also available in HTML at:

   http://publicus.net/articles/edempublicnetwork.html

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E-Democracy, E-Governance and Public Net-Work
By Steven Clift, http://www.publicus.net
Copyright 2003 - Permission required for print or electronic
redistribution.
Version 1.1, September 2003


Introduction

While the art and practice of government policy-making, citizen
participation, and public work is quite complex, the following
illustration provides a simple framework used in this paper:

   For the image, please see:
   http://publicus.net/articles/edempublicnetwork.html


In this model of traditional government policy-making:

1. Citizens provide occasional input between elections and pay taxes.

2. Power in the Governance infrastructure is centered with political
leaders who determine broad policy priorities and distribute
resources based on those priorities and existing programs and legal
requirements.

3. Through government directly, and other publicly funded
organizations, Public Work represents the implementation of the
policy agenda and law.


Over time of course, bureaucratic barriers to reform make it
difficult for leaders to recognize changes in citizen needs and
priorities.  Citizen input, outside of elections, often has a
difficult time getting through.  Disconnects among citizens, leaders,
and those who implement public work are often based on the inability
to easily communicate through and across these groups.

As our one-way broadcast world becomes increasingly two-way, will the
governance process gain the ability to listen and respond more
effectively?

The information-age, led by Internet content, software, technology,
and connectivity, is changing society and the way we can best meet
public challenges. E-democracy, e-governance, and public net-work are
three interrelated concepts that will help us map out our opportunity
to more effectively participate, govern, and do public work.


E-Democracy

E-democracy is a term that elicits a wide range of reactions. Is it
part of an inevitable technology driven revolution?  Will it bring
about direct voting on every issue under the sun via the Internet?
Is this just a lot of hype? And so on. (The answers ... no, no, and
no.)

Just as there are many different definitions of democracy and many
more operating practices, e-democracy as a concept is easily lost in
the clouds.  Developing a practical definition of E-Democracy is
essential to help us sustain and adapt everyday representative
democratic governance in the information age.

Definition

After a decade of involvement in this field, I have established the
following working definition:

E-Democracy is the use of information and communications technologies
and strategies by "democratic sectors" within the political processes
of local communities, states/regions, nations and on the global
stage.

The "democratic sectors" include the following democratic actors:

- Governments

- Elected officials

- Media (and major online Portals)

- Political parties and interest groups

- Civil society organizations

- International governmental organizations

- Citizens/voters

- Current E-Democracy Activities

Each sector often views its new online developments in isolation.
They are relatively unaware of the online activities of the other
sectors. Those working to use information and communication
technologies (ICTs) to improve or enhance democratic practices are
finding e-democracy a lot more challenging to implement than
speculating on its potential.  This is why it is essential for the
best e-democracy lessons and practices to be documented and shared.

This simplified model illustrates e-democracy activities as a whole.
Building on the first diagram it, sits as a filter on the "input"
border between citizens and governance in first diagram:

   For the image, please see:
   http://publicus.net/articles/edempublicnetwork.html


Governments provide extensive access to information and interact
electronically with citizens, political groups run online advocacy
campaigns and political parties campaign online, and the media and
portal/search sites play a crucial role in providing news and online
navigation.  In this model, the "Private Sector" represents
commercially driven connectivity, software, and technology.  This is
the whole of e-democracy.

E-democracy is not evolving in a vacuum with these sectors only.
Technology enhancements and online trends from all corners of the
Internet are continuously being adopted and adapted for political and
governance purposes. This is one of the more exciting opportunities
as e-mail, wireless networking, personalization, weblogs, and other
tools move in from other online content, commerce, and technology
areas and bring innovation and the opportunity for change with them.

Looking to the center of model, the only ones who experience "e-
democracy" as a whole are "citizens."   In more "wired" countries
most citizens are experiencing information-age democracy as "e-
citizens" at some level of governance and public life.  In developing
countries, e-democracy is just as important, but exists as more of an
institution-to-institution relationship.  In all countries, the
influence of "e-democracy" actually reaches most of the public
through its influence on the traditional media and through word of
mouth via influential members of the community.


"E-Citizens" - Greater Citizen Participation?

To many, e-democracy suggests greater and more active citizen
participation enabled by the Internet, mobile communications, and
other technologies in today's representative democracy.  It also
suggests a different role for government and more participatory forms
of direct citizen involvement in efforts to address public
challenges. (Think e-volunteerism over e-voting.)

Some take this further and view the information revolution as an
inherently democratic "disruptive technology" that will dramatically
change politics for the better.  This view has diminished
considerably, as existing democratic actors have demonstrated their
ability to incorporate new technologies and online communication
strategies into their own activities and protect their existing
interests.  They have to in order to survive.

In the future, most "e-democracy" development will naturally result
from ICT-accelerated competition among the various political forces
in society.  We are experiencing a dramatic “e-democracy evolution.”
 In this evolution, the role, interests, and the current and future
activities of all actors is not yet well understood. There is still
an opportunity to influence its development for the better.

Things will change, but as each democratic sector advances their
online activities, democratic intent will be required to achieve the
greater goals of democracy.

Related resources:

E-Democracy Resource Links
Future of E-Democracy - The Fifty Year Plan
E-Democracy E-Book: Democracy is Online 2.0
See: http://www.publicus.net/articles.html



E-Governance

I use the phrase "Representative E-Government" to describe the e-
democracy activities of government institutions. Others call this "e-
governance." Whether a local government or a United Nations agency,
government institutions are making significant investments in the use
of ICTs in their work. They are expressing "democratic intent." Their
efforts make this one of the most dynamic and important areas of e-
democracy development.

There are distinct differences in how representative institutions and
elected officials use ICTs compared to administrative agencies and
departments.  The use of ICTs by parliaments, heads of
state/government, and local councils (and elected officials in these
institutions) lags significantly behind the administrative-based e-
government service and portal efforts.  This is a services first,
democracy later approach.

This focus of e-government resources on services does not mean that e-
democracy is not gaining increased attention in some governments.  In
fact, leading e-service governments are now at a point where they are
exploring their e-democracy responsibilities more seriously.


Goals for E-Democracy in Governance

Investment in traditional e-government service delivery is justified
based on the provision of greater citizen convenience and the often-
elusive goal of cost-savings.  Goals for e-government in governance
that promote democracy and effective governance include:

1. Improved government decisions

2. Increased citizen trust in government

3. Increased government accountability and transparency

4. Ability to accommodate the public will in the information-age

5. To effectively involve stakeholders, including NGOs, business, and
interested citizen in new ways of meeting public challenges (see
public net-work below)

Consultation Online

The first area of government e-democracy exploration has focused on
consultation within executive policy-making processes. Governments,
like the United Kingdom and Canada, are taking their consultative
frameworks and adapting them to the online environment.  New Zealand
and Canada now have special portals dedicated to promote the open
consultations across their governments.  This includes traditional
off-line opportunities as well as those where online input is
encouraged.  Across the UK, a number of "online consultations" have
been deployed to gather special citizen input via the Internet.

Examples:

Consulting Canadians: http://www.consultingcanadians.gc.ca

New Zealand – Participate: http://www.govt.nz/en/participate

UK E-Democracy Consultation: http://www.e-democracy.gov.uk

Others, including hosting and best practice tips:
http://www.publicus.net/articles/consult.html


Accountability, Trust, the Public Will

These three themes are emerging on the e-democracy agenda.  Building
government accountability and transparency are a significant focus of
e-government in many developing countries.  E-government is viewed an
anti-corruption tool in places like South Korea, Mexico, and others.
Trust, while an important goal, can only be measured in the abstract.
Establishing a causal relationship between e-government/e-democracy
experiences and increased levels of trust will be difficult.

Ultimately, the main challenge for governance in the information age
will be accommodating the will of the people in many small and large
ways online. The great unknown is whether citizen and political
institutional use of this new medium will lead to more responsive
government or whether the noise generated by competing interests
online will make governance more difficult.  It is possible that
current use of ICTs in government and politics, which are often not
formulated with democratic intent, will actually make governance less
responsive.

One thing is clear, the Internet can be used to effectively organize
protests and to support specific advocacy causes.  Whether it was the
use of e-mail groups and text messaging protesting former President
Estrada of the Philippines or the fact a majority of Americans online
sent or received e-mail (mostly humor) after the Presidential
election "tie" in the United States, major moments in history lead to
an explosion of online activity. The social networks online are very
dynamic and governments need to be prepared to accommodate and react
to "electric floods." When something happens that causes a flood,
people will expect government to engage them via this medium or
citizens will instead view government as increasingly unresponsive
and disconnected with society they are to serve.

Related resources:

For more on the e-government and democracy, watch for the 2003 United
Nations World Public Sector Report. Details will be shared on DoWire:
http://www.e-democracy.org/do
Top Ten E-Democracy "To Do List" for Governments Around the World
Top Ten Tips for "Weos" - Wired Elected Officials
See: http://www.publicus.net/articles.html


Public Net-Work

Public net-work is a new concept. It represents the strategic use of
ICTs to better implement established public policy goals and programs
through direct and diverse stakeholder involvement online.

If e-democracy in government represents input into governance, then
public net-work represents participative output using the same or
similar online tools.  Public net-work is a selective, yet public,
approach that uses two-way online information exchange to carry out
previously determined government policy.

Building on the first diagram, the following "bow-tie" model suggests
a more fluid communication environment that can be used to bring
citizens and public work stakeholders closer to the center of
governance.  It also suggests that policy leaders can reach out and
develop closer relationships with citizens and stakeholders.

   For the image, please see:
   http://publicus.net/articles/edempublicnetwork.html


What are public net-work projects?

Public net-work projects have the following things in common:

1. They are designed to facilitate the online exchange of
information, knowledge and/or experience among those doing similar
public work.

2. They are hosted or funded by government agencies,
intergovernmental associations, international government bodies,
partnerships involving many public entities, non-governmental
organizations, and sometimes foundations or companies.

3. While they are generally open to the public, they are focused on
specific issues that attract niche stakeholder involvement from other
government agencies, local governments, non-governmental
organizations, and interested citizens.  Essentially any individual
or group willing to work with the government to meet public
challenges may be included. However, invite-only initiatives with a
broader base of participants are very similar to more strictly
defined "open" public net-work initiatives.

4. In a time of scare resources, public net-work is designed to help
governments more effectively pursue their established missions in a
collaborative and sustainable manner.


In order to work, public net-work initiative hosts need to shift from
the role of "top experts" or "sole providers" of public services to
facilitators of those working to solve similar public problems.
Public net-work moves beyond "one-way" information and service
delivery toward "two-way" and "many-to-many" exchange of information,
knowledge, and experience.

Features

Publicly accessible public net-work projects currently use a mix of
ICT tools available.  The successful projects adopt new technologies
and strategies on an incremental trial and error basis. Unleashing
all of the latest tools and techniques without a user base may
actually reduce project momentum and user participation.

To succeed, these projects must adapt emerging models of distributed
information input and information sharing and develop models for
sustained knowledge exchange/discussion.  They must also build from
the existing knowledge about online communities, virtual libraries, e-
newsletters, and Communities of Practice/Interest.

Some of the specific online features include:

1. Topical Portal - The starting point for public net-work is a web
site that provides users a directory to relevant information
resources in their field - these often include annotated subject
guide links and/or standard Yahoo-style categories.

2. E-mail Newsletter - Most projects keep people up-to-date via
regularly produced e-mail newsletters. This human edited form of
communication is essential to draw people back to the site and can be
used to foster a form of high value interaction that helps people
feel like they are part of the effort.

3. Personalization with E-mail Notification - Some sites allow users
to create personal settings that track and notify them about new
online resources of interest. New resources and links to external
information are often placed deep within an overall site and "What's
New" notification dramatically increases the value provided by the
project to its users.

4. Event Calendar - Many sites are a reliable place to discover
listings of key current events and conferences.

5. FAQ and Question Exchange - A list of answers to frequently asked
questions as well as the regular solicitation of new or timely
questions from participants.  Answers are then gathered from other
participants and shared with all via the web site and/or e-
newsletter.

6. Document Library - Some sites move beyond the portal directory
function and gather the full text of documents. This provides a
reliable long-term source of quality content that often appears and
is removed from other web sites without notice.

7. Discussions - Using a mix of e-mail lists and/or web forums, these
sites encourage ongoing and informal information exchange.  This is
where the "life" of the public net-work online community is often
expressed.

8. Other features include news headline links from outside sources, a
member directory, and real-time online features.

Examples
CommunityBuilders New South Wales –
http://www.communitybuilders.nsw.gov.au

International AIDS Economics Network – http://www.iaen.org

OneFish – http://www.onefish.org

DevelopmentGateway – http://www.developmentgateway.org

Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry - Digital New Deal -
 http://dnd.rieti.go.jp

UK Improvement and Development Agency – Knowledge –
http://www.idea-knowledge.gov.uk

Lessons

1. Government partnerships, with their public missions and resources,
often make ideal hosts for broad, horizontal information exchange.
Government departments that feel their status/purpose will be
threatened by shifting from an expert gatekeeper to an involved
facilitator are not ideal hosts.

2. All online features must be designed with the end user in mind.
They must be usable and easy to learn.  Complex systems reduce the
size of the participatory audience – public net-work cannot rely on
an internal office environment where people are required to learn new
systems or use specialty software beyond e-mail and a web browser. To
provide a strong incentive, these systems must save the time it takes
those implementing public policy to do their job effectively.

3. Public net-work sites broaden the awareness of quality information
resources on a timely basis.  Finding what you need, when you need it
is more likely to occur when a community of interest participates in
building a comprehensive resource.  However, over time these sites
will naturally face currency issues that must be handled. There are
limits to the value of information exchange.  Too much information,
or bad information, can paralyze decision-making or distract people
from the task at hand.  All good things should be taken in
moderation.

4. Building trust among the organizations and individuals
participating in the development and everyday use of a collaborative
site is essential.  This relates to developing the "neutral host"
facilitation role, along with sustained funding, by the host.
Special care must be taken when building partner relationships and
host "branding" kept to a minimum.  Partnerships, with clear
responsibilities and goals, will better position efforts as a truly
participatory community projects.

5. Gathering and sharing incentives, particularly for resource links
is a particularly tricky area.  Involving people with solid
librarianship and communication skill sets is essential.  Creating a
more sustainable model where participants more actively submit
information (e.g. seeking submissions from users for more than 5% of
link listings for example) is an ongoing challenge. In-kind
partnerships where staff time is donated may be more effective than
relying on the time of unaffiliated individual volunteers.  With more
localized efforts, individual volunteers may be the best or only
option.

6. Informal information sharing has tremendous potential.  To
effectively encourage horizontal communication, facilitation is often
required. Projects must leverage existing online communities and be
willing to use technologies, like e-mail lists if that is what people
will actually use.  In my opinion, the CommunityBuilder.NSW site is
one of the few sites that effectively integrate e-mail and web
technology to support sustained online deliberation and information
exchange.

7. The connection to decision-makers and authority is significant.
Government-led public net-work projects require political leadership
and strong management support.  Paradoxically, an effective online
involvement program on the implementation side of government, if
connected to government leaders, may operate as an "early warning
system" and allow government to adapt policy with fewer political
challenges.


Related resources:

The public net-work section above is based on an article I wrote for
the OECD's E-Government Working Group. An expanded discussion of case
examples and the future direction of public net-work is available in
Public Net-work: Online Information Exchange in the Pursuit of Public
Service Goals (Word/RTF)
<http://www.publicus.net/articles/oecdpublicnetwork.rtf>.


Conclusion

To be involved in defining the future of democracy, governance and
public work at the dawn of the information-age is an incredible
opportunity and responsibility. With the intelligent and effective
application of ICTs, combined with democratic intent, we can make
governments more responsive, we can connect citizens to effectively
meet public challenges, and ultimately, we can build a more
sustainable future for the benefit of the whole of society and world
in which we live.





This article originally prepared for ACP FMKES Workshop:
http://www.onefish.org/id/159181
PowerPoint presentation available from (7MB):
http://www.onefish.org/id/159425

To arrange a presentation or speech on “public net-work” please
contact Steven Clift and visit this web page for more information:
http://www.publicus.net/speaker.html

For more information about an online exchange among leading public
net-work practitioners, see:
http://www.publicus.net/publicnetwork.html


^               ^               ^                ^
Steven L. Clift    -    W: http://www.publicus.net
Minneapolis    -   -   -     E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minnesota  -   -   -   -   -    T: +1.612.822.8667
USA    -   -   -   -   -   -    M: +1.612.203.5181

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