Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice /
FOREWORD - Don Tapscott PREFACE 1. A PEACE CORPS FOR PROGRAMMERS - Matthew Burton Tipping Point: The Extinction of Pencils Competition Is Critical to Any Ecosystm Creating a Developer Corps Conclusion 2. GOVERNMENT AS A PLATAFORM - Tim O'Reilly Government As a Plataform Lesson 1: Open Sta...
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Gestão da Inovação Participação Online Transparência Governamental |
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Gestão da Inovação Participação Online Transparência Governamental Lathrop, Daniel Ruma, Laurel Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
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Gestão da Inovação Participação Online Transparência Governamental |
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FOREWORD - Don Tapscott
PREFACE
1. A PEACE CORPS FOR PROGRAMMERS - Matthew Burton
Tipping Point: The Extinction of Pencils
Competition Is Critical to Any Ecosystm
Creating a Developer Corps
Conclusion
2. GOVERNMENT AS A PLATAFORM - Tim O'Reilly
Government As a Plataform
Lesson 1: Open Standards Sparks Innovation and Growth
Lesson 2: Build a Simple System and Let It Evolve
Lesson 3: Design for Participation
A Robustness Principle for Government
Lesson 4: Learn from Your "Hackers"
Lesson 5: Data Mining Allows You to Harness Implicit Participation
Lesson 6: Lower the Barriers to Experimentation
Lesson 7: Lead by Example
Practical Steps for Government Agencies
3. BY THE PEOPLE - Carl Malamud
4. THE SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE - Beth Simone Noveck
The Closed Model of Decison Making
New Technologies and Civic Life
Participatory Democratic Theory in the Age Networks
5. ENGINEERING GOOD GOVERNMENT - Howard Dierking
The Articles of Confederation and the Stovepipe Antipattern
Continued Maintenance: The Blob and Confederacy
Conclusion
6. ENABLING INNOVATION FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT - David G. Robinson, Harlan Yu, and Edward W. Felten
Citizen Initiatives Lead the Way
Providing for Reuse and Innovation
Data Authenticity Down the Line
Why Bother with Bulk?
Conclusion
7. ONLINE DELIBERATION AND CIVIC INTELLIGENCE - Douglas Schuler
Definitions and Assertions
Democracy, Deliberation, and the Internet
Findings and Issues
Conclusion
8. OPEN GOVERNMENT AND OPEN SOCIETY - Archon Fung and David Weil
Transparecency's Moment?
The Dark Side of Open Government
The Missing Diagnosis
Targeted Transparency
A Matter of Politics
Conclusion
9. "YOU CAN BE THE EYES AND EARS": BARACK OBAMA AN DTHE WISDOM OF CROWDS - Micah L. Sifry
Change.gov Shows How to Change the Gov
"You Can Be the Eyes and Ears"
Recovery.gov Site Still Under Construction
Online Town Hall or "Participation Theater"?
Open Data and Open Government
Co-creation, Co-optation, or Collision?
10. TWO-WAY STREET: GOVERNMENT WITH THE PEOPLE - Mark Drapeau
Pockets of Excellence: The Goverati
Conclusion
11. CITIZENS' VIEW OF OPEN GOVERNMENT - Brian Reich
The First "We President"
The Internet Has Made Us Lazy
Toward a Findable Government
Advanced Citizenship
Conclusion
12. AFTER THE COLLAPSE: OPEN GOVERNMENT AND THE FUTURE OF CIVIL SERVICE - David Eaves
The Coasean Collapse
The Long Tall of Public Policy
Patch Culture
The End of Objectivity
Two Preconditions to Government As Platform: Capacity for Self-Organization and Collaboration Extend the Network
The Next Civil Service Culture: The Gift Economy
Conclusion
13. DEMOCRACY, UNDER EVERYTHINH - Sarah Schacht
Many Voices, Many Messages, One Government
My Idea
Revealing Obscured Government Data
Improving Communication without Being Crushed by Email
How to Improve Civic Engagement
Conclusion
14. EMERGENT DEMOCRACY - Charles Armstrong
Democracy As a Scaling Mechanism
Limiting Factors and the Internet
Building an Emergent Democracy
The Road to Emergent Democracy
15. CASE STUDY: TWEET CONGRESS - Wynn Netherland and Chris McCroskey
Tweet Congress: Build an App, Start a Movement
Starting the Movement: We Are All Lobbyists Now
So, Who Gets It?
Impact
Conclusion
16. ENTREPRENEURIAL INSURGENCY: REPIBLICANS CONNECT WITH THE AMERICAN PEOPLE - Nick Schaper
Entrepreneurial Insurgency and Congress
Congress Tweets, Too
I YouTube, You YouTube
Social Media and the Fight for Transparency
Conclusion
17. DISRUPTING WASHINGTON'S GOLDEN RULE - Ellen S. Miller
The Bad Old Days: When Insiders Ruled
This Is the Mashable Now
What Comes Next
18. CASE STUDY: GOVTRACK.US - Joshua Tauberer
Opening Legislative Data
Screen Scraping Congress
Engaging the GovTrack Community
Conclusion
19. CASE STUDY: FOLLOWTHEMONEY.ORG - Edwin Bender
Accessing Political Donor Data Fraught with Problems
The National Institute on Money in State Politics' Role in the Fight Greater Transparency
Bolstering the Spirit of Public Disclosure Laws
State-Level Transparency Faces Serious Challenges
In an Ideal World: Recommendations for Open Data
Conclusion
20. CASE STUDY: MAPLIGHT.ORG - Daniel Newman
Why We Founded MAPLight.org
MAPLight.org's Unique Contribution
Nuts and Bolts: Using MAPLight.org
Berriers to Transparency
Conclusion
21. GOING 2.0: WHY OPENSECRETS.ORG OPTED FOR FULL FRONTAL DATA SHARING - Sheila Krumholz
The Decision to Let Go of the Data
It's Not Easy Being Open
Creating a New Model for Transparency
The Future Is Now
Conclusion
22. ALL YOUR DATA ARE BELONG TO US: LIBERATING GOVERNMENT DATA - Jerry Brito
Liberating Government Data: Carl Malamud Versus the Man
Disclosing Government Data: Paper Versus the Internet
Acessing Government Data: Open Distribution Versus Jealous Control
Demanding Government Data: Public Money Versus Private Research
RECAP: Freeing PACER Documents for Public Use
Conclusion
23. CASE STUDY: MANY EYES - Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg
Policy
From Policy to Politicians
Visual Literacy
Conclusion
24. MY DATA CAN'T TELL YOU THAT - Bill Allison
The How and Why of Data Collection
Federal Data: Approximations Galore
Good Data Doesn't Mean Good Results
Conclusion
25. WHEN IS TRANSPARENCY USEFUL? - Aaron Swartz
Shaing Documents with the Public
Generating Databases for the Public
Interpreting Databases for the Public
An Alternative
26. TRANSPARENCY INSIDE OUT - Tim Koelkebeck
Complexity Creates Opacity
Transparency, Meet Institutional Inertia
Kaleidoscope IT: One-Off Apps Obscure Information
A Market Focused on Proposals, Not Products
Framing the Window
Conclusion
27. BRINGING THE WEB 2.0 REVOLUTION TO GOVERNMENT - Gary D. Bass and Sean Moulton
Government Transparency: Three Hurdles
Putting It All Together: Disclosure of Federal Spending
Conclusion
28. TOADS ON THE ROAD TO OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA - Bill Schrier
What Is Government?
Data Collection
Exposing the Soul of Government
Conclusion
29. OPEN GOVERNMENT: THE PRIVACY IMPERATIVE - Jeff Jonas and Jim Harper
Privacy-Enhancing Practices
Conclusion
30. FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACTS: PROMISES AND REALITIES - Brant Houston
The Act and Amendments
Conclusion
31. GOV->MEDIA->PEOPLE - Dan Gillmor
Crowdsourcing in Action
Conclusion
32. OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE FOR OPEN GOVERNMENT AGENCIES - Carlo Daffara and Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona
Advantages of FLOSS for Government and Public Agencies
Best Practices: Managemnet
Best Practices: Technical
Best Practices: Social
Make It Easy to Experiment and Learn
Conclusion
33. WHY OPEN DIGITAL STANDARDS MATTER IN GOVERNMENT - Marco Fioretti
Badly Used Technology Hinders Progress
The Digital Age Explained
Standards and the Problems with Digital Technology
The Huge Positive Potential of Digital Technologies
Free and Open Standards and Software: The Digital Basis of Open Government
Conclusion
34. CASE STUDY: UTAH.GOV - David Fletcher
A Historical Perspective
What Today's Landscape Looks Like
Champions Discovered in All Branches of State Government
The Dramatic Shift to Web 2.0 Principles and Tools
Making Data More Accessible
Conclusion
A. MEMO FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA ON TRANSPARENCY AND OPEN GOVERNMENT
INDEX |
format |
Livro Geral |
author |
Lathrop, Daniel Ruma, Laurel |
author_facet |
Lathrop, Daniel Ruma, Laurel |
author_sort |
Lathrop, Daniel |
title |
Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
title_short |
Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
title_full |
Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
title_fullStr |
Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
title_full_unstemmed |
Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
title_sort |
open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
https://acervo.enap.gov.br/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=524439 |
isbn |
9780596804350 |
_version_ |
1793948543857197056 |
spelling |
KOHA-OAI-ENAP:5244392023-10-16T14:38:03Z nam a22 7a 4500 524439 524552 BR-BrENAP 20230927182641.0 230926b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 por d 9780596804350 BR-BrENAP Pt_BR eng 658.4063 O611 Open government : collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / editado por Daniel Lathrop e Laurel Ruma. -- Califórnia, EUA : O'Reilly Media, 2010. 402 p. : il. FOREWORD - Don Tapscott PREFACE 1. A PEACE CORPS FOR PROGRAMMERS - Matthew Burton Tipping Point: The Extinction of Pencils Competition Is Critical to Any Ecosystm Creating a Developer Corps Conclusion 2. GOVERNMENT AS A PLATAFORM - Tim O'Reilly Government As a Plataform Lesson 1: Open Standards Sparks Innovation and Growth Lesson 2: Build a Simple System and Let It Evolve Lesson 3: Design for Participation A Robustness Principle for Government Lesson 4: Learn from Your "Hackers" Lesson 5: Data Mining Allows You to Harness Implicit Participation Lesson 6: Lower the Barriers to Experimentation Lesson 7: Lead by Example Practical Steps for Government Agencies 3. BY THE PEOPLE - Carl Malamud 4. THE SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE - Beth Simone Noveck The Closed Model of Decison Making New Technologies and Civic Life Participatory Democratic Theory in the Age Networks 5. ENGINEERING GOOD GOVERNMENT - Howard Dierking The Articles of Confederation and the Stovepipe Antipattern Continued Maintenance: The Blob and Confederacy Conclusion 6. ENABLING INNOVATION FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT - David G. Robinson, Harlan Yu, and Edward W. Felten Citizen Initiatives Lead the Way Providing for Reuse and Innovation Data Authenticity Down the Line Why Bother with Bulk? Conclusion 7. ONLINE DELIBERATION AND CIVIC INTELLIGENCE - Douglas Schuler Definitions and Assertions Democracy, Deliberation, and the Internet Findings and Issues Conclusion 8. OPEN GOVERNMENT AND OPEN SOCIETY - Archon Fung and David Weil Transparecency's Moment? The Dark Side of Open Government The Missing Diagnosis Targeted Transparency A Matter of Politics Conclusion 9. "YOU CAN BE THE EYES AND EARS": BARACK OBAMA AN DTHE WISDOM OF CROWDS - Micah L. Sifry Change.gov Shows How to Change the Gov "You Can Be the Eyes and Ears" Recovery.gov Site Still Under Construction Online Town Hall or "Participation Theater"? Open Data and Open Government Co-creation, Co-optation, or Collision? 10. TWO-WAY STREET: GOVERNMENT WITH THE PEOPLE - Mark Drapeau Pockets of Excellence: The Goverati Conclusion 11. CITIZENS' VIEW OF OPEN GOVERNMENT - Brian Reich The First "We President" The Internet Has Made Us Lazy Toward a Findable Government Advanced Citizenship Conclusion 12. AFTER THE COLLAPSE: OPEN GOVERNMENT AND THE FUTURE OF CIVIL SERVICE - David Eaves The Coasean Collapse The Long Tall of Public Policy Patch Culture The End of Objectivity Two Preconditions to Government As Platform: Capacity for Self-Organization and Collaboration Extend the Network The Next Civil Service Culture: The Gift Economy Conclusion 13. DEMOCRACY, UNDER EVERYTHINH - Sarah Schacht Many Voices, Many Messages, One Government My Idea Revealing Obscured Government Data Improving Communication without Being Crushed by Email How to Improve Civic Engagement Conclusion 14. EMERGENT DEMOCRACY - Charles Armstrong Democracy As a Scaling Mechanism Limiting Factors and the Internet Building an Emergent Democracy The Road to Emergent Democracy 15. CASE STUDY: TWEET CONGRESS - Wynn Netherland and Chris McCroskey Tweet Congress: Build an App, Start a Movement Starting the Movement: We Are All Lobbyists Now So, Who Gets It? Impact Conclusion 16. ENTREPRENEURIAL INSURGENCY: REPIBLICANS CONNECT WITH THE AMERICAN PEOPLE - Nick Schaper Entrepreneurial Insurgency and Congress Congress Tweets, Too I YouTube, You YouTube Social Media and the Fight for Transparency Conclusion 17. DISRUPTING WASHINGTON'S GOLDEN RULE - Ellen S. Miller The Bad Old Days: When Insiders Ruled This Is the Mashable Now What Comes Next 18. CASE STUDY: GOVTRACK.US - Joshua Tauberer Opening Legislative Data Screen Scraping Congress Engaging the GovTrack Community Conclusion 19. CASE STUDY: FOLLOWTHEMONEY.ORG - Edwin Bender Accessing Political Donor Data Fraught with Problems The National Institute on Money in State Politics' Role in the Fight Greater Transparency Bolstering the Spirit of Public Disclosure Laws State-Level Transparency Faces Serious Challenges In an Ideal World: Recommendations for Open Data Conclusion 20. CASE STUDY: MAPLIGHT.ORG - Daniel Newman Why We Founded MAPLight.org MAPLight.org's Unique Contribution Nuts and Bolts: Using MAPLight.org Berriers to Transparency Conclusion 21. GOING 2.0: WHY OPENSECRETS.ORG OPTED FOR FULL FRONTAL DATA SHARING - Sheila Krumholz The Decision to Let Go of the Data It's Not Easy Being Open Creating a New Model for Transparency The Future Is Now Conclusion 22. ALL YOUR DATA ARE BELONG TO US: LIBERATING GOVERNMENT DATA - Jerry Brito Liberating Government Data: Carl Malamud Versus the Man Disclosing Government Data: Paper Versus the Internet Acessing Government Data: Open Distribution Versus Jealous Control Demanding Government Data: Public Money Versus Private Research RECAP: Freeing PACER Documents for Public Use Conclusion 23. CASE STUDY: MANY EYES - Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg Policy From Policy to Politicians Visual Literacy Conclusion 24. MY DATA CAN'T TELL YOU THAT - Bill Allison The How and Why of Data Collection Federal Data: Approximations Galore Good Data Doesn't Mean Good Results Conclusion 25. WHEN IS TRANSPARENCY USEFUL? - Aaron Swartz Shaing Documents with the Public Generating Databases for the Public Interpreting Databases for the Public An Alternative 26. TRANSPARENCY INSIDE OUT - Tim Koelkebeck Complexity Creates Opacity Transparency, Meet Institutional Inertia Kaleidoscope IT: One-Off Apps Obscure Information A Market Focused on Proposals, Not Products Framing the Window Conclusion 27. BRINGING THE WEB 2.0 REVOLUTION TO GOVERNMENT - Gary D. Bass and Sean Moulton Government Transparency: Three Hurdles Putting It All Together: Disclosure of Federal Spending Conclusion 28. TOADS ON THE ROAD TO OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA - Bill Schrier What Is Government? Data Collection Exposing the Soul of Government Conclusion 29. OPEN GOVERNMENT: THE PRIVACY IMPERATIVE - Jeff Jonas and Jim Harper Privacy-Enhancing Practices Conclusion 30. FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACTS: PROMISES AND REALITIES - Brant Houston The Act and Amendments Conclusion 31. GOV->MEDIA->PEOPLE - Dan Gillmor Crowdsourcing in Action Conclusion 32. OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE FOR OPEN GOVERNMENT AGENCIES - Carlo Daffara and Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona Advantages of FLOSS for Government and Public Agencies Best Practices: Managemnet Best Practices: Technical Best Practices: Social Make It Easy to Experiment and Learn Conclusion 33. WHY OPEN DIGITAL STANDARDS MATTER IN GOVERNMENT - Marco Fioretti Badly Used Technology Hinders Progress The Digital Age Explained Standards and the Problems with Digital Technology The Huge Positive Potential of Digital Technologies Free and Open Standards and Software: The Digital Basis of Open Government Conclusion 34. CASE STUDY: UTAH.GOV - David Fletcher A Historical Perspective What Today's Landscape Looks Like Champions Discovered in All Branches of State Government The Dramatic Shift to Web 2.0 Principles and Tools Making Data More Accessible Conclusion A. MEMO FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA ON TRANSPARENCY AND OPEN GOVERNMENT INDEX Gestão da Inovação 55676 Participação Online 68410 Transparência Governamental 16210 Lathrop, Daniel Ruma, Laurel 202309 Raynara G |
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