Steven Clift on Wed, 16 Jan 2002 02:08:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Future of E-Democracy Article |
Cross-posted extensively, yet appropriately. I hope. So much of the early hype about the Internet and its democratic potential has been not been met. Or has it? I say, set low expectations and declare victory. In my Future of E-Democracy speech I share a number of real life examples of places where the Internet is changing democracy (not always for the better). Check it out from: http://www.publicus.net/articles/future.html Comments? Cheers, Steven Clift http://www.publicus.net P.S. If you have examples to add, e-mail me: clift@publicus.net *** Democracies Online Newswire - http://www.e-democracy.org/do *** --- Please Forward ---> Future of E-Democracy - Speech by Steven Clift, January 2002 ____________________________________________________________ An extended version of my "Future of E-Democracy - The 50 Year Plan" speech is now available online at: http://www.publicus.net/articles/future.html This article shares a pragmatic, yet futuristic vision of governance when e-democracy exists as an integrated part of "real" everyday representative democracy. It includes dozens of examples and web links to leading government e-democracy applications and important primary source material. I try to answer two big questions - Which e-democracy applications will become universal in the coming decade? What long-term trends will influence efforts to improve our democracies through the use of information and communication technologies? This my most important article since the release of my E-Democracy E-Book <http://www.publicus.net/ebook> in June 2000. Here is the outline of the speech: Introduction Defining E-democracy E-Governance - Exceptional Practice Makes Perfect -- E-mail Notice -- In-person Public Hearing Recordings and Materials -- Online Public Hearings and Consultations -- Wired Politicians Reach Out and Serve, or Perish -- Local Civic Deliberations and Global Networking Trending Toward the Future - Why not look through 2040? -- Family and Social Networking -- E-Government - The E-Business Model that Works? -- New Breed of Politician After 2015 -- E-Citizens, the Ultimate Challenge Conclusion Read it online from <http://www.publicus.net/articles/future.html>. Please send in your comments or share your thoughts publicly on the web forum linked from the speech. I also want to note that additional short articles, including "An Internet of Democracy," the "Top Ten E-Democracy 'To Do List' for Governments Around the World," and the "Top Ten Tips for "Weos" - Wired Elected Officials" are available from <http://publicus.net>. My next short article will share the top ten tips on government and civic online consultations. Join my Democracies Online Newswire <http://www.e-democracy.org/do> (details below) to be notified about the pending article and other online resources related to democracy and the Internet. Sincerely, Steven Clift http://www.publicus.net Democracies Online http://www.e-democracy.org/do P.S. Here is my mini-bio and an invitation to join my Democracies Online Newswire. About the Author Steven Clift is an online strategist and public speaker focused on the use of the Internet in democracy, governance, and community. For a decade he has worked to fundamentally improve democracy and citizen participation through the use of the Internet. Introduced around the world as one of the leading experts on e-democracy, he actively networks people around the world and shares information and ideas through his 2300 member Democracies Online Newswire. For his full biography, visit <http://www.publicus.net/index.html#bio>. Democracies Online Newswire Join now from: http://www.e-democracy.org/do DO-WIRE is your primary source for what's important and happening with the convergence of democracy and the Internet around the world. DO-WIRE is a free, low volume, moderated e-mail announcement list. Launched in January 1998, DO-WIRE now connects over 2300 experts, practitioners, journalists, and citizens from around the world. If you are interested in democracy online, which includes politics online, new media, e-governance, e-government, online advocacy, citizen interaction and related topics, then join us. Each week, well known e-democracy expert and speaker Steven Clift forwards, with occasional analysis, no more than seven carefully selected messages. Posts include news, article, and report web links, event and conference announcements, calls for papers, and often uncover important "primary source" online resources, projects, and initiatives of significance. Browse the web archive from: http://www.mail-archive.com/do-wire@tc.umn.edu/ DO-WIRE Member Comments Comments from DO-WIRE members are the best invitation to join: 'must reading' 'highest quality' 'interesting content' 'keeps me informed ... not inundated' 'incredibly rich, diverse, deep coverage' 'best source ... invaluable resource' 'your contributions are ... informative and enlightening' 'thoughtful analysis and provocative personal perspective' Subscribe via E-mail To SUBSCRIBE for direct e-mail delivery, please type your e-mail address in the form above or send an e-mail message to: listserv@tc.umn.edu In the message body, write: SUB DO-WIRE "Your Name (Place)" Please note that you must confirm your subscription via e-mail. - END - ^ ^ ^ ^ Steven L. Clift - W: http://www.publicus.net Minneapolis - - - E: clift@publicus.net Minnesota - - - - - T: +1.612.822.8667 USA - - - - - - - ICQ: 13789183 *** Please send submissions to: DO-WIRE@TC.UMN.EDU *** *** To subscribe, e-mail: listserv@tc.umn.edu *** *** Message body: SUB DO-WIRE *** *** To unsubscribe instead, write: UNSUB DO-WIRE *** *** Please forward this post to others and encourage *** *** them to subscribe to the free DO-WIRE service. *** ------- End of forwarded message ------- _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold