Open Government West is just revving up on this second day. People from several states and British Columbia are gathered around, looking at the various proposals for presentations here in Seattle City Hall. We're all voting about what talks people would like to see and hear.
The picture from right is from yesterday, at a panel I helped moderate about social media policy and government. People were voting there too, this time on recommendations for how to best implement social media policy and government.
It's only normal to look at what's happening now in the light of what happened to you in the past. As I look back over my career, the most workshops I went to were staged by or for benefit of journalists, such as the National Writers Workshops. Journalists would gather for a couple of days and talk about reporting and writing. These sessions were always valuable for the people you met and for what you learned. The other day, at the first gathering of Social Media Club Tacoma, one of my former writers floored me by saying she remembered a writing technique I had taught her. I had picked up the technique at one of those national writers workshops.
There's clearly a need for something similar in the Open Government community. As I look around the room and pick out people I know, I see citizen activists, community organizers, a slew of Information Technology workers, Web techies, PR people, software developers, small business entrepreneurs, grad students from the Evans School at UW and officials who work in a variety of jobs and a variety of levels at a variety of government levels.
The challenge, of course, is that this is not a unified group of people who are used to meeting with each other. So it's an open question whether events like this will continue to take place. I hope they do. The group of us do not constitute a profession that naturally gathers. But we constitute a movement that believes passionately in the importance of communication and the dialogue of government. There are tools to be learned, challenges to overcome, opportunities to be recognized and articulated.
What makes me smile as I type is the biggest difference. Journalists were a profession that organized workshops. Open government believers are here a conference organizing a sort of profession. Five years from now, our vocabulary and tools about open government will be much broader than any of us can imagine. So will a new 'profession' - the profession of linking communication, data and democracy for better public policy and a better world.
Link to original post
Open Government West
Like it?
comments
0
Posted March 27, 2010 with 226 reads
Keywords:
eGov & Government 2.0, open government
Other Posts by Walter Neary
Cautions from an Unknown Prophet of 1873 - November 29, 2009
The power and potential to inform about budgets - October 22, 2009
Useful Legal Advice about Twitter, Facebook and Blogs - September 23, 2009
Elected Officials Should Get on Twitter If Only to Listen - September 3, 2009
Dean Halstead is a Lead Associate with Booz Allen Hamilton and serves on the Advisory Board for the SmartBrief on Social Media. More »
John Kamensky is a Senior Fellow with the IBM Center for The Business of Government. More »
Steve Radick is a Lead Associate with Booz Allen Hamilton and serves on the Advisory Board for the SmartBrief on Social Media. More »
- Individuals
- YOU
- Andrew Allison
- Andrew Krzmarzick
- Anthony Zacharzewski
- b3rn
- Candi Harrison
- Carl Haggerty
- Craig Thomler
- Dave Briggs
- David Eaves
- Elizabeth Ross-Harrison
- Emma Mulqueeny
- Greg Palmer
- Gwynne Kostin
- Ingrid Koehler
- Jackson Pollock
- Jared Elosta
- John Gray
- Justin Herman
- Kit Plummer
- Lauri Stevens
- Liz Azyan
- Marc Gunther
- Melissa Tullio
- Mike Kujawski
- Noel Hatch
- Oliver Bell
- Paige Craig
- Paul Canning
- Richard Fahey
- Sara Cope
- Stephen Morse
- Steve Radick
- Susan Gardner
- Elected/Appointed Officials
- Alex Makin
- Civil Air Patrol - NatCap
- Douglas Carswell
- John Duncan
- Leighton Andrews
- Nancy Heltman
- Group Blogs
- CivSource
- Connecting Bristol
- IBM Ctr - Business of Government
- Microsoft Public Sector
- Social Government
No events listed

About Social Media Today



