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Government

Snurb — Friday 6 May 2011 00:20

Who Engages in e-Policymaking Processes?

Politics | Government | e-Government | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
The final presenter on this first day at CeDEM 2011 is Rebecca Schild, whose interest is in engaging policy communities online, in Canada. Canada is at an important crossroads in public consultation at this point; there has been substantial consultation in the past using older media technologies, but since the 1990s there was a neoliberal shift towards a more exclusive policy process that became dominated by private sector interests. Can this be redressed using e-participation?

Does the Internet increase participation in policy processes, then, and for whom? Can this draw on the emerging networked public sphere, or does it …

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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 23:29

What e-Democracy Can Learn from the Use of Social Media during Acute Events

Government | e-Government | Produsage Communities | Social Media Network Mapping | Twitter | Social Media | Crisis Communication | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
My own keynote was next at CeDEM 2011, and flowed on very nicely from Caroline’s presentation. Here are the slides, and the full paper – audio to follow soon also online now, as usual…

Towards Distributed Citizen Participation: Lessons from WikiLeaks and the Queensland Floods

View more presentations from Axel Bruns
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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 23:22

Of Lightweight Crowds and Heavyweight Communities

Government | e-Government | Produsage Communities | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
The second round of keynotes at CeDEM 2011 starts with Caroline Haythornthwaite, whose focus is on making sense of online community structures. She begins from a social network analysis perspective, which understands social networks as constituted of relations between actors. Such social networks transcend online social networks, of course; rather, we now need to take a whole-of-system perspective in which social networking takes place across a range of networks, including online networks.

What’s especially important here, too, is a focus on new forms of collaborating and organising; with the shift towards Web 2.0, but also with many other concurrent …

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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 19:53

Networks of Political Blogging in Greece

Politics | Government | Blogs and Blogging | Social Media Network Mapping | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
The final speaker in this CeDEM 2011 session is Kostas Zafiropoulos, whose interest is in political blogging in Greece. He describes Greek blogs as a self-organising community, and begins by showing the well-known image from Adamic & Glance’s study of the US political blogosphere around the 2004 election (which, analysing the patterns of interlinking between blogs, showed a highly polarised environment at the time).

Kostas’s project undertook a similar study for Greece. They began by using Technorati to find Greek political blogs (with “some” authority, according to Technorati’s measures), and tagged them according to their political orientation. During …

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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 19:32

Uses of Political Blogging in the 2010 Swedish Election

Politics | Government | e-Government | Elections | Blogs and Blogging | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
The next speaker at CeDEM 2011 is Jakob Svensson, who shifts our attention towards the individual in political participation. He does this against the background of the 2010 Swedish elections, which for the first time used social media in a significant way. Jakob focussed on Nina Larsson, a politician of the conservative Liberal’s Party, who used two blogs during her campaign.

Jakob notes the different forms of rationalities (deliberative, but especially also expressive) which are on display in such uses; beyond this, there is also a more instrumental use of social media to influence election outcomes, of course (at …

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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 19:17

Twitter in e-Participation

Politics | Government | e-Government | Twitter | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
The next CeDEM 2011 session starts with a presentation by Peter Mambrey, whose focus is on the potential role of Twitter in e-participation. He begins by noting the expansion of the media ecology and the take-up of new media forms by specific groups in society; this creates new opportunities for political participation and self-empowerment, but also challenges for local administration and government.

There is a rising expectation of service quality, growing demands for local service delivery and expertise, competition between cities for citizens and enterprises, demographic change (with a marked population decline in some areas in Germany, for example) …

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Snurb — Thursday 5 May 2011 17:49

Building towards Deliberation and Civic Intelligence

Politics | Government | e-Government | CeDEM 2011 |

Krems.
I’ve made it to Austria for the third year running, to attend the Conference on e-Democracy. We begin the day with a keynote by Douglas Schuler – and my own keynote will come later today, too. The proceedings from the conference will appear soon on Google Books, by the way – in line with the open access philosophy espoused by many e-democracy initiatives. The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #cedem11, by the way.

Doug begins his talk with the premise that current trends aren’t adequate for the challenges we face – can we intelligently readjust …

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Snurb — Sunday 1 May 2011 23:03

Towards Distributed Citizen Participation: Lessons from WikiLeaks and the Queensland Floods (CeDEM 2011)

Politics | Government | e-Government | Produsage Communities | Crisis Communication | CeDEM 2011 |

CeDEM 2011

Towards Distributed Citizen Participation: Lessons from WikiLeaks and the Queensland Floods

Axel Bruns

  • 5 May 2011 – Keynote at the Conference on e-Democracy, Krems, Austria
Towards Distributed Citizen Participation: Lessons from WikiLeaks and the Queensland Floods

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Full Paper (PDF)

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Snurb — Saturday 23 October 2010 19:39

A Technological Shaping of the Social in Evidence-Based Policymaking Platforms

Politics | Government | Produsers and Produsage | AoIR 2010 |

Gothenburg.
The next speaker at AoIR 2010 is Anders Madsen, whose focus is on design choices in policy-oriented technologies of knowledge management. This operates in the context of discussions over the role of knowledge in democracy – how is the relevance of information and facts settled? Two divergent approaches to this highlight the role of science in generating evidence-based policy (which responds to well-defined problems), or alternatively see a range of wicked problems that need broad participation and socially robust policies.

Digital democracy can aid policymaking in these contexts; policymaking procedures can be grounded in new technologies of knowledge management …

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Snurb — Thursday 21 October 2010 19:36

Theorising the Net as a Universal Public Service

Government | Internet Technologies | AoIR 2010 |

Gothenburg.
The final speaker at AoIR 2010 is Sebastian Deterding, who is interested in reframing Web 2.0 as a public service right to communicate. One example of the debates around this is the French HADOPI three-strikes law around filesharing, which would remove Net access from offending users; others have framed Google or Facebook as universal public services, and describe broadband access as just as important as water or electricity.

The Internet is now a core communicative backbone for various communication networks, then – but how might we think about the Net as a public service in a more systematic, technology-neutral …

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Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

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Inside the Moral Panic at Australia's 'First of Its Kind' Summit about Kids on Social Media (Crikey)

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Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

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Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

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