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From e-gov to m-gov in the cloud: Leapfrog to the future Dr. Costis Toregas The George Washington University May 12, 2011
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E-gov as a model Government invests in automation, infrastructure Citizens are served by government employees Participation requires access, PCs and expertise
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E-gov examples Paying parking tickets on-line Mapping crime for reports Municipal meetings broadcast live
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Technology advances Cloud computing Virtualization Location-enabled applications Mobility Ubiquitous broadband Social Networks
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These advances permit new models of innovation
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Policy drivers Citizen-centric Collaboration Cost containment Risk reduction Cyber security
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There is a shift from e-gov to m-gov
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M-gov is different Paying parking tickets on-line Paying meters by phone Mapping crime for reports Reporting crime potential by SMS Municipal meetings broadcast live Crowdsourcing decisions
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The new road Government focuses on business process reengineering Citizens serve themselves with mobile devices m-gov: Smart phone apps and broadband deliver location- enabled services
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Some good practices
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Citizens become united and visible From Chile to Pittsburg Citizen-managed Uses cell phones, FaceBook app Community awareness and public accountability
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And they shape their future
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Street Bump VERIZON FEBRUARY 2011 Phone accelerometer senses when car hits a big pothole Geotags spot using phone GPS Forwards information automatically to local authorities
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Crowd sourcing Toxins and dangerous emissions Simple cell phone adaptations Every one becomes a monitor Personal and collective alerts
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A modest proposal discussed in 2010 1.Network the cities 2.Train everyone 3.Citizen-centered systems 4.Try a pilot and grow
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Network Connect Cyprus towns for exchanges of Best Practice Share development and transfer of innovations
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Technical strategy Citizen-centric Agree on common architecture for applications Go to the cloud! From PCs to phones!
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Partnerships Reduce costs by using capacity and expertise of others Focus on government strengths: process Common goal setting and Service Level Agreements (SLAs) for future success
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Who can organize Major city(ies) Association of Municipalities Central Government Private industry(ies) PPP of the above
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European and global experience with Collective Action
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Select high visibility, high demand application Conduct needs assessment Back office vs. citizen-centric Align with existing priorities Opportunity for new business development
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One possible way to organize Public Innovation Organization Industry Technology Govt Funding Cities Service Pilot project Technology BPR SLAs, services Committees
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Build a roadmap Articulate desired result(s) by citizen consultation Inventory of as-is processes, assets Business Process Re- engineering Technology decisions (build, own, outsource, Cloud) Financing plan Incentives for participation First pilots Sharing control (risk and reward) Disseminate Institutionalize innovation
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Simplify: start a pilot
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Challenge private industry Infrastructure Application development Shifting costs to the transactions Keeping up with technology changes
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toregas1@gwu.edu
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