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Shaping government policy: The Australian Government Consultation Blog

The Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO) released a paper to discuss how all Australians might engage in the shaping of public policy online via the Australian Government Consultation Blog.

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  •  Do you want your say on government policy?
  • Would you comment at an online government forum asking for your views?
  • What features would you like to see on such a forum? What expectations would you have?

Help us design the proposed Australian Government Consultation Blog.

  1. Post your comment using the link below.
  2. Read more about the proposal.

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To raise awareness about the project and solicit public views on AGIMO’s discussion paper, this webpage will be open for comments until 3 December 2007.

Your recommendations will be included in a final Open Forum Report to the Australian Government which will determine the future direction for the Government’s blogging project, expected to be up and running by March 2008.

Please post your comments using the link below.

RECOMMENDED READING

1. Australian Government Consultation Blog (Discussion Paper)

www.agimo.gov.au/services/consultation_blog 

2. Gary Nairn releases Australian Government Consultation Blog discussion paper (media release)

www.smos.gov.au/media/2007/mr_252007.html



Recommended Reading

Central government would benefit from a more creative and adventurous approach to communicating with the public over the internet, a new UK report finds.

The ‘Digital Dialogues’ research was commissioned by the Ministry of Justice from the Hansard Society, a not-for-profit body focused on strengthening democratic engagement. The project was aimed at raising awareness within government of the potential for online citizen engagement, and to evaluate user characteristics in 13 examples of blogs or online forums run by government departments [...]

[...] The public shows interest in participating online, the report says. "Citizens welcomed online engagement generally, saying they would take up opportunities in the future and recommend it to others. However, most expressed dissatisfaction with the specific exercise they were involved in."

Reasons for public dissatisfaction include some fairly basic flaws in the way government informs citizens about online consultations and lets them know what they can expect by participating. "In most Digital Dialogues case studies, the long-term influence of participation on policy was unclear to the public. Response management is a crucial component of good engagement," the report says [...]

Full story is published on the Headstar e-Government Blog - 

http://www.headstar.com/egblive/?p=54

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