The KANZ Broadband Summit provides a unique opportunity for industry, research and policy representatives from Australia, Korea and New Zealand to share insights into trends and challenges in our increasing digital future.
Dr Mark Elliott is the founder of Collabforge, an innovative consultancy responsible for a number of cutting-edge digital government initiatives within Australia and abroad. These include the City of Melbourne's Future Melbourne, a multi award winning world-first ‘City plan that anyone can edit’, as well as wePlan Parks Victoria, which leverages social media for the first time to ‘Help guide the future of Victoria’s parks’, and the Southern California Bicycle & Pedestrian Planning Wiki, comprising a new approach to public involvement in transportation planning.
2. Social technology strategy
Online community building
Participatory democracy
Collabforge works almost exclusively with government, local, state, federal,
international.
3. Government 2.0
Case Studies
The NBN
Topics for this presentation:
1. Gov 2.0 - what it is & why it's important.
2. Some case studies, looking at what Australia has been doing in this space.
3. Finally, how the National Broadband Network is actually the supercharger
that can take digital government to the next level.
5. Government 2.0 is big news in Australian digital government, and in digital governme
globally. What is it? A not so subtle reference to the intersection of government and Web
2.0. What is Web 2.0?
The second generation Web, where there is a movement away from static webpages, t
dynamic and shareable content and social networking (YouTube, Facebook, Wikipedia
Flickr, blogging, Twitter, etc...). This shift is less to do with a revolution in technical
capability, and more about the behaviour of how people use the Internet.
Instead of passive consumption along the lines of more traditional print media or
television, Web 2.0 is about using the internet as a social platform for generating and
sharing your own content, alongside the content provide by others, including
organisations, and also governments.
Gov 2.0 then, is a rethinking of government as a platform for participation - for the
public, but also, for government itself - which draws upon the tools, processes and
learnings of Web 2.0.
6. Case Studies
There is great diversity with regard to Gov 2.0, so this presentation can only
provide you with a keyhole view.
7. Collabforge has been working with UNESCO to establish an online community to sup
World Heritage implementation across the Pacific Islands.
As part of this work I met a dedicated lady who is employed at the Vanuatu Cultural
Centre.
She acts as a liaison between UNESCO and Vanuatu’s World Heritage sites, mediatin
between unconnected villages, her government, UNESCO and other state interests and
experts, many of whom working in Canberra at Department of Sustainability, Environmen
Water, Population and Communities (DSEWPC).
She is able to achieve all this, thanks to a single internet connected personal comput
and a suite of online collaboration and communication tools.
In other words, it’s Web 2.0 that makes it possible for Vanuatu to manage its World
Heritage sites and participate in the program...
If we consider this to represent the regional frontier of Gov 2.0, how is this phenomeno
affecting Australian cities?...
8. The city plan
..that anyone can edit
The City of Melbourne was the first in the world to develop a truly collaborative
city plan ‘that anyone could edit’.
The process first involved mapping the city's existing planning process, then
reengineering this for collaboration.
9. futuremelbourne.com.au
What resulted was a wiki-based collaborative platform and engagement
strategy.
This strategy sought to first carefully establish an internal online
community within the City of Melbourne itself, before growing the
participation over time to include stakeholders and eventually public
participants.
What resulted was quite remarkable, and has yet to be replicated on such a
scale.
10. World’s 1st collaborative city
plan
Public could add, edit, delete
content 24/7
City planners collaborating
with the public
Not a single instance of spam,
off-topic or offensive
contribution
City planners effectively collaborated with the public, exchanging information
and helping each other improve the plan.
This resulted in two-way learning and outcomes that were beyond what the
city could have achieved with its previous, comparatively ‘closed-door’,
approach.
11. An example of a typical page in the plan. There is an edit button on every page that
any logged in user can click.
12. After clicking the edit button, the user sees an editing suite, much like Microsoft Word
or any other word processor.
Users simply type in their contribution, and click save.
13. 13
‘Revision control’ functionality provides an audit trail that makes it easy to
understand who contributed what.
This slide shows a relatively minor contribution.
Green highlighted text was added, and red highlighted text was deleted.
14. Contributions ranged from simple spelling corrections, through to extensive well-
considered articles such as this one.
This contribution shared knowledge on how the city of Helsinki successfully dealt
with bicycle lanes.
What's important to note here is that certain people are naturally drawn towards
certain tasks and types of engagement...
15. ...and that given a channel, people felt comfortable to express their creativity in the
medium of policy development.
- With these sort of outcomes, we now realise itʼs critical to re-evaluate what it means
to engage the community, and what we can expect to receive in return.
- This further raises the challenge for organisations to participate and engage the
public online.
- Iʼve always felt this project could be extended in remarkable ways
- imagine a national network of ʻFutureCitiesʼ collaborating together to share and
build city planning practice and intelligence...
16. - We’ve gone on to employ this approach in a range of other contexts, such as
national and state park management.
17. weplan.parks.vic.gov.au
- Our work with Parks Victoria has focused on providing a strategic approach
to collaborative public consultation across a range of projects in a more
modular fashion.
18. Organisation-wide approach
Challenging the tyranny of
distance
Preserves online community
between projects
Recently Spotlighted by VIC
Gov 2.0 Action Plan
- This coordinated, organisation-wide approach to online collaboration and
consultation is something we’re increasingly involved with (more recently with
EPA Victoria).
=CLICK=
Further, this approach helps Parks Victoria to overcome the distances
involved in state-wide consultation,
=CLICK=
and as mentioned, a modular approach to projects means new initiatives can
draw upon the existing community
=CLICK=
Finally, wePlan was recently given the spotlight by the Victorian Gov 2.0 Action
Plan
19. - Again, using a similar approach, we worked with SCAG to provide a
collaborative planning and consultation platform.
20. bikepedwiki.scag.ca.gov
- In this case, for bicycle and pedestrian lanes - the first stages of the
redevelopment of Southern California’s transportation plan
21. - Changing tack a bit,
- During the end of last year, we developed an online community component
for the Department of Justice’s Vital Valued Victorians campaign.
- Its purpose was to thank Victoria’s emergency services volunteers such as
the CFA and SES in the wake of the Black Saturday bushfires,
- and, to promote community awareness around being an emergency
services volunteer in general.
22. Over 14,000
Facebook
Fans
facebook.com/emergencyvolunteers
- We sought to establish the initial conditions necessary to form a community,
through first inviting trusted contributors.
- Then, we undertook the day to day community management under our avatar,
VicVolunteer,
- and most importantly, by seeding content to the page designed to catalyse
engagement and sharing.
- The various activities were all underpinned by a social media strategy, which was
tailored to the unique circumstances and objectives of the campaign.
23. - One aspect that surprised us (although it probably shouldn’t have),
- were the user-submitted media and photos, which are powerful
engagement generators.
- The caption for this photo reads:
- “I took this during the Black Saturday campaign and edited it in photoshop
when I got home, the young man in question is from my Region and on his
second ever strike team.”
24. trade.vic.gov.au
- Changing tack yet again,
- We worked with the Victorian Department of Business and Innovation to re-
imagine what an international trade mission looks like in the era of Web
2.0.
- In fact, a good part of our work revolves around helping governments answer
the question “we know we need to do something in this space, but what?”
- In this case, outcome was a strategically designed interactive platform to
underpin trade mission activity to India.
- This is only the first stage, with the next being to invite Indian business
onto the platform to extend international trade discussions and
networking.
- Where could this go from here? - we’ve got plans, but just imagine what eBay
could teach us about international government trade missions...
25. intranet.vic.gov.au
- For the final case study,
- We worked with Victorian Department of Premier and Cabinet to redevelop
the whole of Victorian Government intranet.
- Specifically, it was redeveloped for Web 2.0 functionality, with the aim of
helping enable cross-departmental collaboration and innovation.
26. GOVERNMENT AS
A PLATFORM
- So you can see from these examples that Gov 2.0 builds upon the platform of
government, by extending participation into the virtual sphere.
- And of course government has always been a platform for particular individuals and
groups to manage collective needs.
- But with Gov 2.0, what we’re seeing is a radical leap with regard to the capacity of this
platform.
- Especially, its ability to accommodate a great many more participants as well as type
and modes of participation.
27. - For example, recalling FutureMelbourne,
- The effective use of online collaborative policy development opened up the drafting
process from what was traditionally as few as 5 people, to more than 500.
- The problems faced by our cities are shared problems.
- They are problems which other governments around the world have already made
inroads towards resolving.
- Drawing on Gov 2.0 tools and processes extends the platform and enables
solutions to be sourced from a wider pool of knowledge.
28. - A problem shared, after all, is a problem halved...
- and this is as true for ourselves (and apparently also our canine friends) as it is for our
cities.
- The Helsinki bike lanes contribution from earlier is testament to this.
29. - And this capacity is expanding almost exponentially,
- taking us very quickly towards yet even more participatory forms of engagement.
- The OECD’s conception of participatory democracy fits well here I think....and it’s
certainly a model that mirrors our approach generally.
30. - So how is the Australian government responding to this disruptive transformation?
- On this front, Australia, I'm proud to say, is leading the world in many respects.
31. - In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the Australian government
established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.
- With 13 recommendations in the Taskforce’s report, the government has endorsed
virtually all of them,
- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was
delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.
- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, whic
will no doubt be a great source of learning.
32. The NBN t 2 .0
o ver nmen
...and G
- So finally, what are the implications for the NBN?
- Well, as I mentioned at the start of this presentation....
33. - I like to think of the NBN as the supercharger for Gov 2.0,
- igniting opportunities for broader participation in governance and policy development.
- Further, with the standardisation of high speed access the NBN will bring, and the
massive boom in technological innovation this will unleash, whole new categories of
participation will most certainly arise.
- The digital literacy of citizens will grow increasingly advanced,
- not just with regard to what they can create and engage with individually,
- but importantly how they can get things done together, and in terms of what they exp
of government.
34. - As an illustration, think of the the recent Facebook and social network enabled
unrest in the middle east.
- And as people become more empowered through these channels, so do their
economies and ability to exploit opportunities.
35. - In this setting, the role of the national broadband network is the same that has been pla
by roads, rail, and the telephone in the past,
- opening up opportunities for those who were previously unconnected, and enabling
corner stores to grow into international, economic powerhouses.
36. - Here’s what a virtual town hall meeting looks like in Second Life... where people interac
with other citizens via virtual avatars...
- While this form of rich participation currently exists, it will be infrastructure such as the N
that will enable its widespread adoption.
37. - The NBN points towards universal service, where all citizens, no matter how
geographically dispersed, can participate in government activities, through a wide variety
of media and modes.
- This is no more important than in Australia, one of the most sparsely populated
countries in the world.
38. ...a unique moment
- And therefore, the NBN represents a unique opportunity for Gov 2.0
- As with roads, rail and telephony, increased opportunities for participation ultimately equ
with greater economic opportunities - for both government, industry, the public, everyo
In our experience with Gov 2.0 initiatives, seeking to broaden opportunities for participati
is likely to result in increasing:
- your pool of available knowledge,
- the veracity of this knowledge,
- buy-in and shared ownership,
- innovation,
- momentum,
- resilience, and
- understanding.
- Gov 2.0 is able to achieve this, because it builds on the foundations of democracy
today, adding an additional layer which in essence leverages our collective intelligenc
- To me, Gov 2.0 is the natural extension of the unfinished project that is democrac
39. Every man... feels
that he is a
participator in
the government of
affairs, not merely
at an election one
day in the year,
but every day
- This was even foreseen by Thomas Jefferson when he imagined a future democracy
where:
- Every man … feels that he is a participator in the government of affairs,
- not merely at an election one day in the year, but every day.
- Jefferson no doubt wasn’t thinking about the concept of Gov 2.0 when he penned
these words, however lastly [next slide]...
40. - I’d like to recall something Australian Senator Kate Lundy brought to our attention
during a presentation last year - something which can perhaps be positioned as
another piece in the road towards Jefferson’s vision (& I paraphrase slightly),
- The NBN isn’t just economic infrastructure for the future, it is necessary social
infrastructure which will drive equality of access and participation in government
decision making into the future.
41. www.collabforge.com
contact@collabforge.com
+ 61 (0)3 9663 7310
..and
with
that
thought
I’ll
say
thank
you
and
good
morning!
...and
please
don’t
hesitate
to
come
up
and
say
hi
throughout
the
day,
should
you
wish
to
discuss
any
of
these
ideas
further.
Notes de l'éditeur
\n
We work almost exclusively with government, providing:\n\n[READ]\n
Today I want to talk to you about:\n\nGov 2.0 - what it is & why it's important\n\nSome case studies, looking at what Australia has been doing in this space,\n\n..and finally, how the National Broadband Network is actually the supercharger that can take digital government to the next level. \n
- So first up, a little about Government 2.0... which as some of you may know, is often referred to as Gov 2.0 for short...\n\n- [Show of hands: “Gov 2.0; Web 2.0; social media”]\n
- Government 2.0 is big news in Australian digital government, and of course in digital government globally.\n\n- What is it?\n\n- A not so subtle reference to the intersection of government and Web 2.0.\n\n- What is Web 2.0? :-)\n\n- Think of it as the second generation Web, where there is a movement away from static webpages, to dynamic and shareable content and social networking.\n- think YouTube, Facebook, Wikipedia, Flickr, blogging, Twitter, etc...\n\n- This shift is less to do with a revolution in technical capability, and more about the behaviour of how people use the Internet.\n\n- Instead of passive consumption along the lines of more traditional print media or television, Web 2.0 is about using the internet as a social platform for generating and sharing your own content, alongside the content provide by others, including organisations, and also governments.\n\n- Gov 2.0 then, is a rethinking of government as a platform for participation - for the public, but also, for government itself - which draws upon the tools, processes and learnings of Web 2.0.\n
- So, next I’ll step through some case studies in Gov 2.0, which we’ve had the fortune to be involved with at Collabforge.\n\n- Keep in mind that there is great diversity with regard to Gov 2.0, and with the limited time i have, there’s only opportunity to provide you with a keyhole view.\n
- As an example of this diversity, I wanted to share an anecdote actually that arose from work I was engaged with yesterday, in of all places, Fiji.\n\n- We’ve been working with UNESCO to establish an online community to support WH implementation across the PIs, \n\n- and as part of this work I met a dedicated lady who is employed at the Vanuatu Cultural Centre. \n\n- Acting as a liaison between UNESCO and Vanuatu’s WH sites, she mediates between the interests of otherwise unconnected villages, her government, UNESCO and other state interests and experts, many of whom working in Canberra at Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities.\n\n- She is able to achieve all this, thanks to a single internet connected personal computer and a suite of online collaboration and communication tools. \n\n- In other words, it’s Web 2.0 that makes it possible for Vanuatu to manage its WH sites...\n\n- Which in turn drives tourism, generates international interest in Vanuatu, and ultimately, sustainable development, by putting pressure on the government to adopt best practice environmental and cultural heritage management practices. \n\n- All of this via one solitary internet-enabled terminal.\n\n- So then, if we consider this to represent the regional frontier of Gov 2.0, how is this phenomenon affecting Australian cities?...\n\n
- The City of Melbourne was the first in the world to develop a truly collaborative city plan ‘that anyone could edit’.\n\n- The process first involved mapping the city's existing planning process, then reengineering this for collaboration.\n\n- Particular attention was paid to the life-cycle of the online community and how each stage could be best deployed in order to maximise opportunities for participation.\n
- The City of Melbourne was the first in the world to develop a truly collaborative city plan ‘that anyone could edit’.\n\n- The process first involved mapping the city's existing planning process, then reengineering this for collaboration.\n\n- Particular attention was paid to the life-cycle of the online community and how each stage could be best deployed in order to maximise opportunities for participation.\n
- What resulted was a wiki-based collaborative platform and engagement strategy \n\n- This strategy sought to first carefully establish an internal online community within the City of Melbourne itself, before growing the participation over time to include stakeholders and eventually public participants.\n\n- What resulted was quite remarkable, and has yet to be replicated on such a scale.\n\n
- Besides achieving (and as far as we can tell) a world first, \n\n=CLICK=\n\n- during the four week open-editing period \n\n=CLICK= \n\n- What we found was that city planners were effectively collaborating with the public, exchanging information and helped each other improve contributions\n\n- This resulted in two way learning and results that were beyond what the city could have achieved with its previously comparative ‘closed-door’ approach. \n\n=CLICK=\n\nAnd, not a single instance of spam, off-topic or offensive contribution\n\n\n
- Besides achieving (and as far as we can tell) a world first, \n\n=CLICK=\n\n- during the four week open-editing period \n\n=CLICK= \n\n- What we found was that city planners were effectively collaborating with the public, exchanging information and helped each other improve contributions\n\n- This resulted in two way learning and results that were beyond what the city could have achieved with its previously comparative ‘closed-door’ approach. \n\n=CLICK=\n\nAnd, not a single instance of spam, off-topic or offensive contribution\n\n\n
- Besides achieving (and as far as we can tell) a world first, \n\n=CLICK=\n\n- during the four week open-editing period \n\n=CLICK= \n\n- What we found was that city planners were effectively collaborating with the public, exchanging information and helped each other improve contributions\n\n- This resulted in two way learning and results that were beyond what the city could have achieved with its previously comparative ‘closed-door’ approach. \n\n=CLICK=\n\nAnd, not a single instance of spam, off-topic or offensive contribution\n\n\n
- Besides achieving (and as far as we can tell) a world first, \n\n=CLICK=\n\n- during the four week open-editing period \n\n=CLICK= \n\n- What we found was that city planners were effectively collaborating with the public, exchanging information and helped each other improve contributions\n\n- This resulted in two way learning and results that were beyond what the city could have achieved with its previously comparative ‘closed-door’ approach. \n\n=CLICK=\n\nAnd, not a single instance of spam, off-topic or offensive contribution\n\n\n
- As an example of what this looked like....\n\n- A wiki is simply a website that allows users to quickly and easily edit the content of a webpage.\n\n- =CLICK= ‘Edit’ button\n
Edit mode.\n\n=CLICK= SAVE\n
Revision control and management\n\nMinor edits, through to...\n
- Contributions ranged from simple spelling corrections, through to extensive well-considered articles. \n\n- This one shared knowledge on how the city of Helsinki successfully dealt with bicycle lanes.\n\n- And what's important to note here is that certain people are naturally drawn towards certain tasks and types of engagement,..\n
- and that given a channel, people felt comfortable to express their creativity in the medium of policy development.\n\n- With these sort of outcomes, we now realise it’s critical to re-evaluate what it means to engage the community, and what we can expect to receive in return.\n\n- This further raises the challenge for organisations to participate and engage the public online. \n\n- I’ve always felt this project could be extended in remarkable ways \n\n- imagine a national network of Future[Insert city name] collaborating together to share and build city planning practice and intelligence...\n
- We’ve gone on to employ this approach in a range of other contexts, such as national and state park management.\n
- Our work with Parks Victoria has focused on providing a strategic approach to collaborative public consultation across a range of projects in a more modular fashion.\n
- This coordinated, organisation-wide approach to online collaboration and consultation is something we’re increasingly involved with (more recently with EPA VIC). \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFurther, this approach helps Parks Vic overcome the distances involved in state-wide consultation, \n\n=CLICK=\n\nand as mentioned, a modular approach to projects means new initiatives can draw upon the existing community \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFinally, wePlan was recently given the spotlight by the Victorian Gov 2.0 Action Plan \n
- This coordinated, organisation-wide approach to online collaboration and consultation is something we’re increasingly involved with (more recently with EPA VIC). \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFurther, this approach helps Parks Vic overcome the distances involved in state-wide consultation, \n\n=CLICK=\n\nand as mentioned, a modular approach to projects means new initiatives can draw upon the existing community \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFinally, wePlan was recently given the spotlight by the Victorian Gov 2.0 Action Plan \n
- This coordinated, organisation-wide approach to online collaboration and consultation is something we’re increasingly involved with (more recently with EPA VIC). \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFurther, this approach helps Parks Vic overcome the distances involved in state-wide consultation, \n\n=CLICK=\n\nand as mentioned, a modular approach to projects means new initiatives can draw upon the existing community \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFinally, wePlan was recently given the spotlight by the Victorian Gov 2.0 Action Plan \n
- This coordinated, organisation-wide approach to online collaboration and consultation is something we’re increasingly involved with (more recently with EPA VIC). \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFurther, this approach helps Parks Vic overcome the distances involved in state-wide consultation, \n\n=CLICK=\n\nand as mentioned, a modular approach to projects means new initiatives can draw upon the existing community \n\n=CLICK=\n\nFinally, wePlan was recently given the spotlight by the Victorian Gov 2.0 Action Plan \n
- Again, using a similar approach, we worked with SCAG to provide a collaborative planning and consultation platform.\n
- In this case, for bicycle and pedestrian lanes - the first stages of the redevelopment of So Cal’s transportation plan\n
- Changing tack a bit,\n\n- During the end of last year, we developed an online community component for the Department of Justice’s Vital Valued Victorians campaign.\n\n- Its purpose was to thank Victoria’s emergency services volunteers such as the CFA and SES in the wake of the Black Saturday bushfires,\n\n- and, to promote community awareness around being an emergency services volunteer in general. \n
- We sought to establish the initial conditions necessary to enable a community to establish, through first inviting trusted contributors.\n\n- Then, we undertook the day to day community management under our avatar, VicVolunteer,\n\n- and most importantly, by seeding content to the page designed to catalyse engagement and sharing.\n\n- The various activities were all underpinned by a social media strategy, which was tailored to the unique circumstances and objectives of the campaign.\n
- We sought to establish the initial conditions necessary to enable a community to establish, through first inviting trusted contributors.\n\n- Then, we undertook the day to day community management under our avatar, VicVolunteer,\n\n- and most importantly, by seeding content to the page designed to catalyse engagement and sharing.\n\n- The various activities were all underpinned by a social media strategy, which was tailored to the unique circumstances and objectives of the campaign.\n
- We sought to establish the initial conditions necessary to enable a community to establish, through first inviting trusted contributors.\n\n- Then, we undertook the day to day community management under our avatar, VicVolunteer,\n\n- and most importantly, by seeding content to the page designed to catalyse engagement and sharing.\n\n- The various activities were all underpinned by a social media strategy, which was tailored to the unique circumstances and objectives of the campaign.\n
- One aspect that surprised us (although it probably shouldn’t have),\n\n- were the user-submitted media and photos, which are powerful engagement generators.\n\n- The caption for this photo reads:\n\n- “I took this during the Black Saturday campaign and edited it in photoshop when I got home, the young man in question is from my Region and on his second ever strike team.”\n
- Changing tack yet again, \n\n- We worked with the Victorian Department of Business and Innovation to re-imagine what an international trade mission looks like in the era of Web 2.0.\n\n- In fact, a good part of our work revolves around helping governments answer the question “we know we need to do something in this space, but what?”\n\n- In this case, outcome was a strategically designed interactive platform to underpin trade mission activity to India.\n\n- This is only the first stage, with the next being to invite Indian business onto the platform to extend international trade discussions and networking.\n\n- Where could this go from here? - we’ve got plans, but just imagine what eBay could teach us about international government trade missions?..\n
- For the final case study,\n\n- We worked with Victorian Dept of Premier and Cabinet to redevelop the whole of Vic Gov intranet.\n\n- Specifically, it was redeveloped for Web 2 functionality, with the aim of helping enable cross department collaboration and innovation.\n
- So you can see from these examples that Gov 2.0 builds upon the platform of government, by extending participation into the virtual sphere.\n\n- And of course government has always been a platform for particular individuals and groups to manage collective needs. \n\n- But with Gov 2.0, what we’re seeing is a radical leap with regard to the capacity of this platform.\n\n- Especially, its ability to accommodate a great many more participants as well as types and modes of participation.\n
- For example, recalling FutureMelbourne, \n\n- The effective use of online collaborative policy development opened up the drafting process from what was traditionally as few as 5 people, to more than 500. \n\n- The problems faced by our cities are shared problems. \n\n- They are problems which other governments around the world have already made inroads towards resolving. \n\n- Drawing on Gov 2.0 tools and processes extends the platform and enables solutions to be sourced from a wider pool of knowledge.\n
- A problem shared, after all, is a problem halved... \n\n- and this is as true for ourselves (and apparently also our canine friends) as it is for our cities.\n\n- The Helsinki bike lanes contribution from earlier is testament to this.\n\n
- And this capacity is expanding almost exponentially, \n\n- taking us very quickly towards yet even more participatory forms of engagement.\n\n- The OECD’s conception of participatory democracy fits well here I think....and it’s certainly a model that mirrors our approach generally.\n
- So how is the Australian government responding to this disruptive transformation?\n\n- On this front, Australia, I'm proud to say, is leading the world in many respects.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- In response to these types of projects and opportunities, the australian government established the Government 2.0 Taskforce in 2009.\n\n- With 13 recommendations in the TF’s report, the government has endorsed virtually all of them,\n\n- and among other important actions, last year a Declaration of Open Government was delivered by the federal Minister for Finance and Deregulation.\n\n- Further, the state of Victoria has released its own Government 2.0 Action Plan, which will no doubt be a great source of learning.\n
- So finally, what are the implications for the NBN?\n\n- Well, as I mentioned at the start of this presentation....\n
- I like to think of the NBN as the supercharger for Gov 2.0,\n\n- igniting opportunities for broader participation in governance and policy development.\n\n- Further, with the standardisation of high speed access the NBN will bring, and the massive boom in technological innovation this will unleash, whole new categories of participation will most certainly arise.\n\n- The digital literacy of citizens will grow increasingly advanced,\n\n- not just with regard to what they can create and engage with individually, \n\n- but importantly how they can get things done together, and in terms of what they expect of government.\n
- As an illustration, think of the the recent Facebook and social network enabled unrest in the middle east.\n\n- And as people become more empowered through these channels, so do their economies and ability to exploit opportunities. \n
- In this setting, the role of the national broadband network is the same that has been played by roads, rail, and the telephone in the past, \n\n- opening up opportunities for those who were previously unconnected, and enabling corner stores to grow into international, economic powerhouses.\n
- Here’s what a virtual town hall meeting looks like in Second Life... where people interact with other citizens via virtual avatars... \n\n- While this form of rich participation currently exists, it will be infrastructure such as the NBN that will enable its widespread adoption.\n
- The NBN points towards universal service, where all citizens, no matter how geographically dispersed.. can participate in government activities, through a wide variety of media and modes.\n\n- This is no more important than in australia, one of the most sparsely populated countries in the world.\n
- And therefore, the NBN represents a unique opportunity for Gov 2.0\n\n- As with roads, rail and telephony, increased opportunities for participation ultimately equate with greater economic opportunities - for both government, industry, the public, everyone.\n\nIn our experience with Gov 2.0 initiatives, seeking to broaden opportunities for participation is likely to result in increasing:\n\n- your pool of available knowledge,\n- the veracity of this knowledge,\n- buy-in and shared ownership,\n- innovation,\n- momentum,\n- resilience, and\n- understanding. \n\n- Gov 2.0 is able to achieve this, because it builds on the foundations of democracy today, adding an additional layer which in essence leverages our collective intelligence.\n\n- To me, Gov 2.0 is the natural extension of the unfinished project that is democracy.\n
- This was even foreseen by Thomas Jefferson when he imagined a future democracy where:\n\n- Every man … feels that he is a participator in the government of affairs, \n\n- not merely at an election one day in the year, but every day.\n\n- Jefferson no doubt wasn’t thinking about the concept of Gov 2.0 when he penned these words, however lastly [next slide]...\n\n
- I’d like to recall something Australian Senator Kate Lundy brought to our attention during a presentation last year - something which can perhaps be positioned as another piece in the road towards Jefferson’s vision (& I paraphrase slightly),\n\n- The NBN isn’t just economic infrastructure for the future, it is necessary social infrastructure which will drive equality of access and participation in government decision making into the future.\n
..and with that thought I’ll say thank you and good morning!\n \n ...and please don’t hesitate to come up and say hi throughout the day, should you wish to discuss any of these ideas further.\n