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_aOpen government : _bcollaboration, transparency, and participation in practice / _ceditado por Daniel Lathrop e Laurel Ruma. -- |
260 |
_aCalifórnia, EUA : _bO'Reilly Media, _c2010. |
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_a402 p. : _bil. |
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_tFOREWORD - Don Tapscott _tPREFACE _t1. A PEACE CORPS FOR PROGRAMMERS - Matthew Burton _tTipping Point: The Extinction of Pencils _tCompetition Is Critical to Any Ecosystm _tCreating a Developer Corps _tConclusion _t2. GOVERNMENT AS A PLATAFORM - Tim O'Reilly _tGovernment As a Plataform _tLesson 1: Open Standards Sparks Innovation and Growth _tLesson 2: Build a Simple System and Let It Evolve _tLesson 3: Design for Participation _tA Robustness Principle for Government _tLesson 4: Learn from Your "Hackers" _tLesson 5: Data Mining Allows You to Harness Implicit Participation _tLesson 6: Lower the Barriers to Experimentation _tLesson 7: Lead by Example _tPractical Steps for Government Agencies _t3. BY THE PEOPLE - Carl Malamud _t4. THE SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE - Beth Simone Noveck _tThe Closed Model of Decison Making _tNew Technologies and Civic Life _tParticipatory Democratic Theory in the Age Networks _t5. ENGINEERING GOOD GOVERNMENT - Howard Dierking _tThe Articles of Confederation and the Stovepipe Antipattern _tContinued Maintenance: The Blob and Confederacy _tConclusion _t6. ENABLING INNOVATION FOR CIVIC ENGAGEMENT - David G. Robinson, Harlan Yu, and Edward W. Felten _tCitizen Initiatives Lead the Way _tProviding for Reuse and Innovation _tData Authenticity Down the Line _tWhy Bother with Bulk? _tConclusion _t7. ONLINE DELIBERATION AND CIVIC INTELLIGENCE - Douglas Schuler _tDefinitions and Assertions _tDemocracy, Deliberation, and the Internet _tFindings and Issues _tConclusion _t8. OPEN GOVERNMENT AND OPEN SOCIETY - Archon Fung and David Weil _tTransparecency's Moment? _tThe Dark Side of Open Government _tThe Missing Diagnosis _tTargeted Transparency _tA Matter of Politics _tConclusion _t9. "YOU CAN BE THE EYES AND EARS": BARACK OBAMA AN DTHE WISDOM OF CROWDS - Micah L. Sifry _tChange.gov Shows How to Change the Gov _t"You Can Be the Eyes and Ears" _tRecovery.gov Site Still Under Construction _tOnline Town Hall or "Participation Theater"? _tOpen Data and Open Government _tCo-creation, Co-optation, or Collision? _t10. TWO-WAY STREET: GOVERNMENT WITH THE PEOPLE - Mark Drapeau _tPockets of Excellence: The Goverati _tConclusion _t11. CITIZENS' VIEW OF OPEN GOVERNMENT - Brian Reich _tThe First "We President" _tThe Internet Has Made Us Lazy _tToward a Findable Government _tAdvanced Citizenship _tConclusion _t12. AFTER THE COLLAPSE: OPEN GOVERNMENT AND THE FUTURE OF CIVIL SERVICE - David Eaves _tThe Coasean Collapse _tThe Long Tall of Public Policy _tPatch Culture _tThe End of Objectivity _tTwo Preconditions to Government As Platform: Capacity for Self-Organization and Collaboration Extend the Network _tThe Next Civil Service Culture: The Gift Economy _tConclusion _t13. DEMOCRACY, UNDER EVERYTHINH - Sarah Schacht _tMany Voices, Many Messages, One Government _tMy Idea _tRevealing Obscured Government Data _tImproving Communication without Being Crushed by Email _tHow to Improve Civic Engagement _tConclusion _t14. EMERGENT DEMOCRACY - Charles Armstrong _tDemocracy As a Scaling Mechanism _tLimiting Factors and the Internet _tBuilding an Emergent Democracy _tThe Road to Emergent Democracy _t15. CASE STUDY: TWEET CONGRESS - Wynn Netherland and Chris McCroskey _tTweet Congress: Build an App, Start a Movement _tStarting the Movement: We Are All Lobbyists Now _tSo, Who Gets It? _tImpact _tConclusion _t16. ENTREPRENEURIAL INSURGENCY: REPIBLICANS CONNECT WITH THE AMERICAN PEOPLE - Nick Schaper _tEntrepreneurial Insurgency and Congress _tCongress Tweets, Too _tI YouTube, You YouTube _tSocial Media and the Fight for Transparency _tConclusion _t17. DISRUPTING WASHINGTON'S GOLDEN RULE - Ellen S. Miller _tThe Bad Old Days: When Insiders Ruled _tThis Is the Mashable Now _tWhat Comes Next _t18. CASE STUDY: GOVTRACK.US - Joshua Tauberer _tOpening Legislative Data _tScreen Scraping Congress _tEngaging the GovTrack Community _tConclusion _t19. CASE STUDY: FOLLOWTHEMONEY.ORG - Edwin Bender _tAccessing Political Donor Data Fraught with Problems _tThe National Institute on Money in State Politics' Role in the Fight Greater Transparency _tBolstering the Spirit of Public Disclosure Laws _tState-Level Transparency Faces Serious Challenges _tIn an Ideal World: Recommendations for Open Data _tConclusion _t20. CASE STUDY: MAPLIGHT.ORG - Daniel Newman _tWhy We Founded MAPLight.org _tMAPLight.org's Unique Contribution _tNuts and Bolts: Using MAPLight.org _tBerriers to Transparency _tConclusion _t21. GOING 2.0: WHY OPENSECRETS.ORG OPTED FOR FULL FRONTAL DATA SHARING - Sheila Krumholz _tThe Decision to Let Go of the Data _tIt's Not Easy Being Open _tCreating a New Model for Transparency _tThe Future Is Now _tConclusion _t22. ALL YOUR DATA ARE BELONG TO US: LIBERATING GOVERNMENT DATA - Jerry Brito _tLiberating Government Data: Carl Malamud Versus the Man _tDisclosing Government Data: Paper Versus the Internet _tAcessing Government Data: Open Distribution Versus Jealous Control _tDemanding Government Data: Public Money Versus Private Research _tRECAP: Freeing PACER Documents for Public Use _tConclusion _t23. CASE STUDY: MANY EYES - Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg _tPolicy _tFrom Policy to Politicians _tVisual Literacy _tConclusion _t24. MY DATA CAN'T TELL YOU THAT - Bill Allison _tThe How and Why of Data Collection _tFederal Data: Approximations Galore _tGood Data Doesn't Mean Good Results _tConclusion _t25. WHEN IS TRANSPARENCY USEFUL? - Aaron Swartz _tShaing Documents with the Public _tGenerating Databases for the Public _tInterpreting Databases for the Public _tAn Alternative _t26. TRANSPARENCY INSIDE OUT - Tim Koelkebeck _tComplexity Creates Opacity _tTransparency, Meet Institutional Inertia _tKaleidoscope IT: One-Off Apps Obscure Information _tA Market Focused on Proposals, Not Products _tFraming the Window _tConclusion _t27. BRINGING THE WEB 2.0 REVOLUTION TO GOVERNMENT - Gary D. Bass and Sean Moulton _tGovernment Transparency: Three Hurdles _tPutting It All Together: Disclosure of Federal Spending _tConclusion _t28. TOADS ON THE ROAD TO OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA - Bill Schrier _tWhat Is Government? _tData Collection _tExposing the Soul of Government _tConclusion _t29. OPEN GOVERNMENT: THE PRIVACY IMPERATIVE - Jeff Jonas and Jim Harper _tPrivacy-Enhancing Practices _tConclusion _t30. FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACTS: PROMISES AND REALITIES - Brant Houston _tThe Act and Amendments _tConclusion _t31. GOV->MEDIA->PEOPLE - Dan Gillmor _tCrowdsourcing in Action _tConclusion _t32. OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE FOR OPEN GOVERNMENT AGENCIES - Carlo Daffara and Jesus M. Gonzalez-Barahona _tAdvantages of FLOSS for Government and Public Agencies _tBest Practices: Managemnet _tBest Practices: Technical _tBest Practices: Social _tMake It Easy to Experiment and Learn _tConclusion _t33. WHY OPEN DIGITAL STANDARDS MATTER IN GOVERNMENT - Marco Fioretti _tBadly Used Technology Hinders Progress _tThe Digital Age Explained _tStandards and the Problems with Digital Technology _tThe Huge Positive Potential of Digital Technologies _tFree and Open Standards and Software: The Digital Basis of Open Government _tConclusion _t34. CASE STUDY: UTAH.GOV - David Fletcher _tA Historical Perspective _tWhat Today's Landscape Looks Like _tChampions Discovered in All Branches of State Government _tThe Dramatic Shift to Web 2.0 Principles and Tools _tMaking Data More Accessible _tConclusion _tA. MEMO FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA ON TRANSPARENCY AND OPEN GOVERNMENT _tINDEX |
650 | 0 |
_aGestão da Inovação _955676 |
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650 | 0 |
_aParticipação Online _968410 |
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650 | 0 |
_aTransparência Governamental _916210 |
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700 | 1 | _aLathrop, Daniel | |
700 | 1 | _aRuma, Laurel | |
909 |
_a202309 _bRaynara |
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