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1. Richard Kerby
Senior Inter-regional Adviser, E-Government and Knowledge Management
E-Government Branch
Division for Public Administration and Development Management
Department of Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Rabat, Morocco – 29 January 2013
Presentation on Open Government and GovernancePresentation on Open Government and Governance
2. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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What is Open DataWhat is Open Data
No legal barriers
No fees required
Machine readable
No technological barriers
Etc…
In the past Current trends
All data are classified, unless marked
non-classified
All data are non-classified unless marked
classified
Open means :
3. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Benefits of Open DataBenefits of Open Data
Promoting transparency and boosting public trust in
government
Encouraging citizens to participate with government
entities in designing policies and services
Enhancing government effectiveness and efficiency
Creating business opportunities and jobs
Promoting innovation and research
5. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Private Public PartnershipsPrivate Public Partnerships
1. Government should do the least possible and act as a
Facilitator – Build a platform and let others add to it
2. Engage entrepreneurs in developing applications using
government data through workshops and forums
3. Develop Application Programme Interface (API) to support
web developers for your data
4. When more people are working on the data, innovation
happens
7. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Citizen Government DynamicsCitizen Government Dynamics
1. Citizens are becoming data producers as well as data
consumers.
2. Citizens are changing the political landscape by being more
involved in the decision making process
3. Citizens are engaging other citizens to act through social
networking tools
9. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Open Government PledgesOpen Government Pledges
However the ten most common pledges are:
Innovative public accountability mechanisms – including a new ‘openness
barometer in Slovak Republic, a ‘governance observatory’ in Peru and ‘public
scorecard in Dominican Republic.
Open data portals – covering everything from crime statistics and political party
funding to local budgets and procurement (proposed by Chile, Estonia, Israel, Italy,
Jordan, Peru, Romania, Spain and Tanzania).
New legal and institutional mechanisms – including the creation of new state
agencies (including in Peru and Uruguay), changes to access to information laws
and systems (Canada and Croatia) and new anti-corruption laws/strategies
(Estonia, Jordan and Peru).
10. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Open Government PledgesOpen Government Pledges
Improved service delivery – including an interactive local water-point mapping
system in Tanzania, digitized medical records in Spain and new/improved portals
on service delivery in Italy, Israel, Tanzania and Uruguay.
Natural resource transparency – Ukraine and Colombia have both signed up to
the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, while Bulgaria, Colombia and
Canada are taking steps to increase transparency around natural resources
concessions and associated revenues (at both a national and local level).
International aid – Spain and Canada have committed to making their
development agencies more transparent and aligned with international donor
reporting agreements like the International Aid Transparency Initiative.
Public integrity – introduction of new whistle-blower protection laws in Slovak
Republic and Montenegro.
11. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Open Government PledgesOpen Government Pledges
Citizens’ budgets – Bulgaria, Croatia and Tanzania are all creating citizens’
budgets at the national and/or local level to ensure public access to information to
where public resources are going in plain, accessible language.
E-petitions – Ukraine, Slovak Republic, Moldova and Montenegro are all
introducing online e-petition portals to collect and respond to citizens’ proposals
more quickly and effectively.
Challenges and prizes – Uruguay, Israel, Italy, Jordan and Colombia are
introducing government-sponsored prizes and challenges to encourage the private
sector and public agencies to better use government data.
13. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Key Open Data ChallengesKey Open Data Challenges
Lack of overall strategy
The “Top Down” approach / culture
Cultural barriers
Legislation gap
Context gap
14. http://www.unpan.org/dpadm/
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Way ForwardWay Forward
•Development of open government/governance strategy
•Formulation of open government/data framework
•Build Capacity on Open Data within the Government
•Working closely with government data “warehouses”
•Building up the open data community
•Develop a more dynamic open data portal
15. Thank you for your attention.Thank you for your attention.
Twitter: @richardkerbyTwitter: @richardkerby
Email: kerby@un.orgEmail: kerby@un.org
Notes de l'éditeur
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.
Currently, 121 of the 192 UN Member States have some form of Freedom of Information legislation; 31 of these 121 countries have only a constitutional provision which grants a right of free access to governmental information to citizens; Besides the121 countries with some sort of FOI legislation, 20 countries are currently discussing drafts of FOI laws.