Tag: civic engagement

Public consultation or user testing?

  • July 8, 2010 at 11:34 am
  • The only difference between engaging someone in public consultation and engaging them in user testing is, as far as I can see, the type of reward they get for taking part. With user testing it’s easy: the client pays a company an extortionate amount of money to test their product; or, if it’s being done [...]

Would you like more digital engagement knowledge-sharing events?

  • April 27, 2010 at 1:52 pm
  • Well, the pilot digital engagement discussions are over. Should we do more? I only organised three and still haven’t managed to blog about two of them yet. Still, they were good: Simon Whitehouse talked about ‘Policy options for geographic information from Ordnance Survey‘ and Ordnance Survey OpenData, I looked at the Hansard Society’s recent report [...]

Socitim’s ‘Better Connected 2010′ report: what did it say? Join the discussion at Moseley Exchange

  • April 25, 2010 at 11:52 am
  • A few weeks ago Socitm released their Better Connected 2010 report on the quality of local council websites. Stuart Harrison has read the report, and in the last of our pilot digital engagement discussions he will share its insights and his thoughts on them. Socitm is the membership association for ICT professionals in Local Authorities [...]

Releasing local data: what are the challenges?

  • April 23, 2010 at 7:17 am
  • On Monday I was invited to a Local Public Data Panel workshop to help address the challenge of releasing local data to the public. Local council officers, bloggers and activists were brought together to help ‘generate ideas and understanding about what is needed to drive the local public data initiative at a local level’. The [...]

Using online tools, I compared, quizzed and made an informed decision about an election candidate: in 20 minutes

  • April 20, 2010 at 6:05 pm
  • Yesterday, as I was using the internet to prepare for a meeting, I quickly diverted to compare my election candidates and fire off an email to one asking his voting preferences. Twenty minutes later he replied. My MP is standing down, so I used TheyWorkForYou to see how her successor had voted on particular issues [...]

‘Digital Citizens and Democratic Partipation’: discussion outcomes

  • April 20, 2010 at 8:15 am
  • Last night I ran the second of my small-scale research sharing sessions, this time on the Hansard Society’s recent report ‘Digital citizens and democratic engagement‘. I hadn’t had time to plan properly (and still haven’t got around to blogging about Simon’s Ordnance Survey OpenData presentation from last week) but we still managed to have a long [...]

‘Digital citizens and democratic engagement’ report: what does it say? Come and discuss it at Moseley Exchange

  • April 16, 2010 at 5:08 pm
  • Earlier this week Simon Whitehouse enlightened us about Ordnance Survey OpenData (which I still haven’t blogged about); on Monday I will share my limited understanding of the Hansard Society’s recent report ‘Digital citizens and democratic engagement‘. It’s not the easiest report to make sense of: I would have liked fewer paragraphs full of percentages and [...]

The Digital Inclusion Champion hasn’t convinced me that she understands what she’s championing

  • March 30, 2010 at 12:08 pm
  • In yesterday’s interview with BBC Breakfast, Digital Inclusion Champion Martha Lane Fox rather worried me. She seemed to be advocating something because someone else had told her it’s a good idea, and not because she understands the issues herself. Martha Lane Fox: “… Government is going to move most of its services onto the web [...]

How do you react to political mud-slinging?

  • March 23, 2010 at 1:49 pm
  • We’re seeing a lot of it lately, in the run-up to a General Election: one party does something bad, the other party jumps on it; then it happens again, but the other way round. But does this bickering do them any good? I for one am put off voting at all, let alone for the [...]