… And the next generation in government-public collaboration.
This week, the White House released its Open Government Directive – a bold initiative to change the way US government agencies share information with and involve the public.
It’s a big and welcome step forward in creating a more citizen-centred and participatory government that embraces new technologies.
The Open Government Directive is based on three core values:
- Transparency. Government should provide citizens with information about what their government is doing so that government can be held accountable.
- Participation. Government should actively solicit expertise from outside Washington so that it makes policies with the benefit of the best information.
- Collaboration. Government officials should work together with one another and with citizens as part of doing their job of solving national problems.
During the Directive’s official launch, White House staff practiced what they preach. They broadcast the launch live on www.whitehouse.gov as well as in a custom-built Facebook application. The public could post comments and questions via Facebook Twitter and the White House site. You can read more here.
The launch of open government, done in an open way.

But what will the Open Government Directive really do?
Over the next 120 days, federal agencies are required to develop their own dedicated webpages to foster and support greater transparency and public participation, as well as a formal plan for how it will incorporate public participation and collaboration into what it does.
We think this will lead to more sustainable, and therefore more effective, policy decisions and directions.
So, it’s an exciting time to be helping governments and citizens connect and work together!
- Ellis Westwood -
Gmail and GSA – one giant step forward for government
Friday, June 17th, 2011
Contrast GSA’s innovation with government departments here in Canada that use antiquated browsers (IE 6) and Lotus Notes as a major email platform. I know, Lotus Notes. GSA’s decision is one to be commended.
One of the funny parts of this move is that some believe that this will make the more attractive to younger employees. What is amuses me is that younger staff assume that this is the way that it works. It is their expectation that they should be using today’s technologies. However they are in for a surprise with blocked access to Facebook, Youtube, and Twitter, and are shocked and appalled at zero blogging and a 6-12 month approval lag for a wiki.
It just shows that government can be innovative when it choses to do so. GSA is a shinning beacon for other government departments, agencies or ministries to follow, on either side of the 49th parallel.
Joe
Tags: Obama, Open Government Directive, Organizational Leadership, Web 2.0
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