Australian Government 2.0 Taskforce Draft Report
The Taskforce has released its draft report. Comments are due by 16 December 2009. The report is very detailed. A snapshot from the report states:
The invitation to "engage" is both a call to action and affirmation of the vision towards which that action leads. This is the promise of Government 2.0.
"Engagement" is what Government 2.0 is all about:
- Easy to find re-useable public information is, at heart, an invitation to the wider community to engage innovate and create new public value with public sector information (PSI), which often sits underused or simply ignored in government agencies and data banks. As we have seen during our work, as people engage, possibilities – foreseeable and otherwise – are unlocked through the invention, creativity and hard work of citizens, business and community organisations. The government’s job is to liberate much more of its information as a key national asset.
- Public agencies and professional public servants are also invited to engage more energetically with the tools and capabilities of ‘collaborative web’ or Web 2.0. Everything, from enabling data to be re-used, to forming and participating in online communities in their areas of interest will help build a public service that is smarter, more responsive, more strategic and personally rewarding.
- Public agencies and their public servants increasingly associate good practice with deeper engagement with those outside the public service. As the new Australian Public Service Commission (APSC) guidelines make clear, Web 2.0 tools like blogs and wikis now provide unprecedented opportunities to take this much further. In the transition from traditional consultation towards true community collaboration engaging the community and the public service alike is key. In this more open, connected and instinctively adaptive and innovative process, the motivation, interest and skills of all involved contributes to it success.
- Engagement between those in and outside the public service is constrained by the need for public servants to continue to be professional and apolitical. Creating the culture and practices that can seize the new opportunities but yet stay true to enduring public service values will not be easy.
We have little to lose, and much to gain from moving boldly in this direction. Ultimately, the invitation to engage is an invitation to get involved and get things done. This requires us to accelerate the policy, organisational and cultural changes needed so we can reap the rewards of Government 2.0
Engage: getting on with Government 2.0: Draft Report of the Government 2.0 Taskforce is available in pdf format (1138kb). (This document requires the use of Adobe Acrobat Reader). .
The report is also available in html format.
Last updated: 9 December 2009
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Australia tells its bureaucrats to get tweeting
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Article from: AAP. Adelaide Now, December 8, 2009. "Blog, tweet, update Facebook - that's the message the Australian Government is sending its bureaucrats as part of a push to break down barriers between public servants and ordinary people..."
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Australian Government 2.0 Report is the Best So Far
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by Andrea DiMaio, December 8, 2009. "Yesterday the Government 2.0 Taskforce established by the Australian federal government has issues its draft report, which is available for 10 days for comments... The report clearly shows the maturity of their thinking. Alongside some unavoidable 'government speak', such as the need to appoint an agency as a lead and some ambiguity around records management, this is an excellent call for action, which looks at all the relevant angles of government 2.0..."
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Engage: Getting on with Government 2.0: Draft report for comment
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by Peter Alexander. Government 2.0 Taskforce Blog, 7 December 2009. "Here is the draft Government 2.0 Taskforce report Engage: Getting on with Government 2.0. The Taskforce is seeking your comments and input before finalising the report to go to Government..."
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Engage: Getting on with Government 2.0: Report of the Government 2.0 Taskforce
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Government 2.0 Taskforce, December 2009. "Government 2.0 or the use of the new collaborative tools and approaches of Web 2.0 offers an unprecedented opportunity to achieve more open, accountable, responsive and efficient government. Though it involves new technology, Government 2.0 is really about a new approach to organising and governing. It will draw people into a closer and more collaborative relationship with their government. Australia has an opportunity to resume its leadership in seizing these opportunities and capturing the resulting social and economic benefits..."
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Gov 2.0 unveils draft report
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by Fran Foo. Australian IT, December 7, 2009. "The public has been invited to comment on how federal government departments and agencies can utilise web 2.0 to their benefit. They will have until December 16 to air their views on a 129-page draft report on web 2.0, including social networking tools and websites like Facebook and Twitter..."
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Managing the future adoption of Gov 2.0 in Australia
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eGov AU - Craig Thomler's personal eGovernment and Gov 2.0 thoughts and speculations from an Australian perspective, Wednesday, December 9, 2009. "We're beginning to see significant activity in the Gov 2.0 space across Australia, and with the impending release of the Gov 2.0 Taskforce's report there's likely to be even more activity in the coming year. This is definitely not a time for Gov 2.0 proponents to rest on their laurels as there are still many challenges to face before Government 2.0 is firmly embedded within the culture and practice of the public sector..."
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Report urges government to adopt Web 2.0 for services
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by Fran Foo. The Australian, December 8, 2009. "Federal government agencies have been encouraged to use Web 2.0 tools such as live online chat to improve customer service, for example, to shorten waiting times for people on the phone..."
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Yes, minister: tweeting could be the new way of working
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by Ari Sharp. Sydney Morning Herald, December 8, 2009. "Blogging, tweeting and the liberal use of Facebook … far from being a hindrance to getting on with the job, these might soon become a significant part of life in the public service. A government-commissioned report has recommended the public service turn to new media for ''crowd sourcing'' ideas to elicit feedback as part of an effort to put bureaucrats more in touch with the people they are employed to serve..."
- Australian Government 2.0 Taskforce Final Report
- The Australian Federal Government released the final report of the Government 2.0 Taskforce on 22 December 2009.