diumenge, 25 de juny del 2006

Informe anual: Sociedad de la Información Europea

Iniciativa i2010. Primer Informe Anual sobre la Sociedad de la Información Europea (COM(2006) 215 final, 19.5.2006)

http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/site/es/com/2006/com2006_0215es01.pdf

dijous, 22 de juny del 2006

Democracia electrònica, participació política i societat de la informació i del coneixement

Os adjunto el tríptico del curso de verano codirigido por Manuel Medina (UB) y Josep Mª Reniu (UB). Las sesiones se llevaran a cabo entre el 10 y el 14 de julio en horario de tarde, en castellano y catalán. Esperamos que pueda ser de vuestro interés, en especial por el tratamiento multidisciplinar de una realidad que, aunque a veces nos resistamos a ello, lo demanda.

dimarts, 20 de juny del 2006

Online political organizing: lessons from the field

Full text Pdf (243 KB)
Source: Computer Supported Cooperative Work
archive
Proceedings of the 2004 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
table of contents
Chicago, Illinois, USA
PANEL SESSION: Panel
table of contents
Pages: 59 - 62
Year of Publication: 2004 ; ISBN:1-58113-810-5
Authors
Keri Carpenter University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA; Bonnie Nardi University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA; James Moore Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA; Scott Robertson Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA; Daniel Drezner University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Ian Benson Sociality Ltd, London, UK ; Kirsten Foot University of Washington, Seattle, WA; Quintus Jett Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH ; Sponsors
SIGCHI: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction ACM: Association for Computing Machinery; SIGGROUP: ACM Special Interest Group on Supporting Group Work
Publisher
ACM Press New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT
In this panel, a group of practitioners and researchers in the area of online political organizing will present their own research in this area and discuss the relevance of online political organizing to the current political scene - including the U.S. general presidential election, which has just been completed. Panelists come from across the political spectrum and also represent views of the political process in countries other than the United States. What are the tools used in online political organizing? What role do each of these new tools bring to the campaign/election process? How effective have they proven in this election cycle? What is their utility outside the scope of the presidential election cycle? Are they merely "teaser" tools to get people in the door or do they have the potential to facilitate lasting political change in all political arenas large and small? In addition, electronic voting is a current open research area. What do systems need to take into account to assure voters' confidence that their votes are being collected and tallied correctly and securely? What information needs to be presented to the voter at the time of polling to ensure the most effective voting systems available? What do we know at this point and where are the future research areas that need scrutiny? Each panelist will present their current research related to this area and comment on the ways in which their findings add to the current body of knowledge. Particular attention will be paid to articulating research streams that currently need to be addressed and positing methods to address these open research questions.

dimecres, 14 de juny del 2006

Editorial New York Times: Life During Wartime

Ayer (13 de junio) el New York Times publicó este editorial que refleja los testimonios de los bloggers in Iraq.

Reading a small group of Iraqi bloggers who began posting for The Times has helped to fill one of the big gaps in Americans' view of the war in Iraq.

Editorial
Life During Wartime

Published: June 13, 2006

About the time the 2006 New Year's confetti was being swept away from Times Square, a small group of Iraqi bloggers began posting for The Times. "It is a new year, but it is not a happy one," said a 57-year-old doctor who called himself Truth Teller.
Reading the bloggers has helped to fill one of the big gaps in Americans' view of the war in Iraq. Danger in the streets and security fears for anyone seen speaking with Western reporters has made it increasingly hard to get real glimpses of what it's like for the people who have to live there.

At the beginning of the year, the bloggers' complaints were less about car bombs than power failures, black-market fuel and a curfew that didn't allow for much, if any, celebrating. But not always. In January, Zeyad, a Baghdad dentist, wrote: "Over the past two years, I have crawled away from two armed clashes and one carjacking incident; I have witnessed two people being shot in the head and one young kid who had been sprayed by bullets begging my friends and me to take him to the hospital ... and just recently, an American sniper shot right at me and missed on a Baghdad highway for no apparent reason when we pulled over behind their convoy. My taxi driver tried to comfort me by saying it was probably just a rubber bullet."

In May, when three of the bloggers returned — joined by one Iraqi-American writer — their postings had changed. There was less talk of shoddy infrastructure and running for cover from American soldiers, and more fear of radical Islamists and the Sunni and Shiite death squads bringing terror to their neighborhoods. The watershed they referred to repeatedly was the destruction of the golden dome of the Askariya mosque in Samarra, a revered Shiite shrine, on Feb. 22. The bloggers also wrote more about the increasing presence of Taliban-like Islamists, violently imposing restrictions on the Baghdad residents. "These are people who are enforcing their rules by death threats," Hassan, a college student, wrote in May.

Hassan wrote of his 6-year-old sister, who was not allowed to go out to play because her family feared she would be kidnapped or killed. His sister "has never gone to a zoo" and "has only gone to a playground once." Zeyad told the harrowing tale of witnessing the execution of a local generator operator: "When I tried to turn him over so they could carry him into a car, my hands touched his blood-soaked shirt. I could now see that he was shot four times in the chest. There was also a bag nearby with a box of peaches, medication and a Pepsi bottle; he was obviously going to take that home to his kids. I stared in his anguished face again, then at my bloody hands. And that was when I momentarily lost it."

Bloggers, who cannot be fact-checked in normal ways, are no substitute for journalists. But the Iraqis' voices are hypnotic — troubling, fascinating and a critical reminder of the quirky individual humanity of those at the center of what the invasion has unleashed. "[A]midst the blackness of time and the wounds of fate, Iraqis still find a way to crack a smile, even if it hurts," wrote Konfused Kid, a Baghdad college student, at the beginning of the year. "Despite my cynicism, I believe in God (or Allah or whatever you care to name Him), and I pray for the well-being of this country every day. And every day I listen to Metallica and read Philip K. Dick."

"Day to Day in Iraq" can be read online at
daytodayiniraq.blogs.nytimes.com.

dimecres, 31 de maig del 2006

Electronic Frontier Foundation

http://www.eff.org/

He encontrado esta iniciativa a favor de los "derechos digitales" que viene funcionando con cierto éxito en Estados Unidos.

Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Defending Freedom in the Digital World.

EFF is a nonprofit group of passionate people — lawyers, technologists, volunteers, and visionaries — working to protect your digital rights.

From the Internet to the iPod, technologies are transforming our society and empowering us as speakers, citizens, creators, and consumers. When our freedoms in the networked world come under attack, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is the first line of defense. EFF broke new ground when it was founded in 1990 — well before the Internet was on most people's radar — and continues to confront cutting-edge issues defending free speech, privacy, innovation, and consumer rights today. From the beginning, EFF has championed the public interest in every critical battle affecting digital rights.

dimarts, 30 de maig del 2006

TallerWeb1.0

Nuestra colega y amiga Mentxu Ramilo nos ha hecho llegar un interesante texto sobre su experiencia al frente del TallerWeb1.0, un proceso de mejora participativa de páginas webs institucionales en Euskadi (en pocas palabras, mejor que veais el texto). Ni que decir tiene que no sólo merece la pena dicho texto sinó la iniciativa en su conjunto. http://www.enpresadigitala.net/castellano/biblioteca/biblioteca_informacion.jsp?id=703

International Workshop on Government, Citizens and Innovation

The Government of Catalonia (Generalitat de Catalunya) is organizing the third e-Governance Catalonia Forum to be held next 8th june at the Auditori del Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya under the title: International Workshop on Government, Citizens and Innovation. Their aim is to make a revision on how ICT could become an efficient tool to bring together public administration and citizens, improving processes and granting a higher transparency of public policies.

divendres, 26 de maig del 2006

Blogs in Campaign Communication

Aquí podéis encontrar los detalles de esta referencia bibliográfica.
Author: Lawson-Borders, Gracie; Kirk, Rita
Affiliation: Kent State
Source: American Behavioral Scientist, 2005, 49, 4, Dec, 548-559.IS: ISSN 0002-7642
Descriptors: Political Participation; Internet; Political Campaigns; Information Technology; Mass Media Effects; United States of America; Elections; Citizen Participation
Abstract: In Election 2004, campaign Weblogs - or blogs - became a standard feature of campaign Web sites. Monitoring the adaptation of emergent technological tools into political communication assists future generations of scholars to understand the genesis of communication applications and explore future uses. Blogs are online diaries where information is electronically posted, updated frequently, and presented in reverse chronological order. Three concourses of research provide insight into blogging as a political communication function: the investigation of the blog as a social diary, the analysis of blogs as organizing tools, and blogs viewed as a form of civic, participatory journalism. The authors do not claim that blogging had a significant impact on the 2004 election outcome. However, they do argue that its effective use has been demonstrated and emerging applications of the tool pave the way for future campaign communication, one the authors suggest will become a standard part of campaign communication.
36 References. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright 2005.].
Language: English
Publication Year: 2005
Publication Type: Journal Article
Country of Publication: United States
Classification: politics and communication
Journal Name: American Behavioral Scientist
Journal Volume: 49
Journal Issue: 4
Journal Pages: 548-559

divendres, 19 de maig del 2006

Seminario: Gobierno y Administración Electrónica

He recibido esta información. La transcribo aquí por si os pudiera ser de interés.

Estimados Amigos:
El Magíster en Gestión Pública tiene el placer de invitarles, los días 25 y 26 de mayo, el Seminario Permanente de Gobierno y Administración Pública por séptimo año. En esta edición se tratarán las Nuevas Tecnologías, y a lo largo de sus doce horas de duración, pasarán responsables políticos, de la administración y representantes del mundo académico para tratar temas que van desde los nuevos mecanismos de funcionamiento de los partidos a las reformas en el Estado, pasando por la participación ciudadana.
Para inscribirse ponganse en contacto con la oficina del Magíster en Gestión Pública a través de nuestra dirección (mgp@cseg.ucm.es<mailto:mgp@cseg.ucm.es>) o del teléfono (913942554). Las plazas son limitadas y la admisión se hará por orden de inscripción hasta que se cubran en su totalidad.
Les esperamos.
Coordinador del Magister en Gestión Pública
Centro Superior de Estudios de Gestión
Edificio B, Mas Ferré, Campus de Somosaguas 28223 Madrid
*/Tf.913942554/2957/2958 Fax:913942956/*

dijous, 18 de maig del 2006

Barreras para el e-government & e-administration

El Internet Institute de la Universidad de Oxford (OII), solicita a la comunidad cinco minutos de nuestro tiempo para contestar un breve cuestionario para un importante estudio que están realizando para la Comisión Europea titulado “Barreras para el Gobierno y la Administración electrónicos”. Este cuestionario se centra en el ámbito de la UE, pero puede ser rellenado por cualquier persona perteneciente a cualquier Estado, perteneciente o no a la UE, con experiencia en el ámbito del Gobierno y la Administración electrónicos.
Su estudio pretende identificar los obstáculos clave para obtener los beneficios potenciales del Gobierno y la Administración electrónicos par el uso de Internet y otras tecnologías electrónicas relacionadas para ofrecer servicios públicos e información. Las respuestas serán analizadas para ayudar a los responsables políticos sobre cómo el uso de Internet por los poderes públicos puede mejorar la atención de las necesidades de los ciudadanos, empresas, gobiernos y otros colectivos interesados en el ámbito de la Unión Europea. Las respuestas serán tratadas de forma estrictamente confidencial.
Para responder el cuestionario en inglés, francés, alemán o español, podéis dirigiros a:
http://www.egovbarriers.org/?view=survey