Friday, December 11, 2009

E-gov Versus Open Gov: The Evolution of E-democracy

One of the first questions I asked myself when familiarizing myself with the Open Government initiative was: “How is the Obama Administration’s Open Government (Open Gov) initiative different from the Bush Administration’s E-government (E-gov) initiative?” There are many people who use the two terms interchangeably but this paper argues that although they are distinct initiatives in the United States, they are also part of the same E-democracy maturity continuum. Thus while they should not be handled totally separately, they should not be combined either. This blog post provides a high level summary of the findings and recommendations described in more detail in a corresponding white paper.

The E-government efforts of the last decade and the new Open Government initiative share many similar goals and characteristics, the largest being that they both strive to make the Federal Government more transparent. However, they are not synonymous. They are different efforts that are overlapping phases in an incremental growth towards E-democracy. Open Gov can be seen as an evolution of E-gov. Open Gov would not be possible without the outcomes created by E-gov and the advances made in technology (including social media (a.k.a. Web 2.0 or Gov 2.0) and cloud computing), policy (including OMB attempts to amend the current legal/policy environment), and culture (an employee workforce more accustomed to transparency) over the last decade. E-gov was a first and crucial step towards E-democracy. However, the Open Gov initiative is not the end-state solution. It is the most recent maturation of the Federal Government’s growth towards E-democracy, but it is not the final step. There will likely be an initiative that follows Open Government as a new future Administration enters the White House and as tools grow and the culture of the Federal Government evolves.

Some key similarities and differences between the two initiatives are highlighted below. For more detail on each of the following assertions, please see this short E-Gov and Open Gov white paper.


  • The E-gov efforts are directly enabled by law, but the Open Gov initiative is not.

  • E-gov and Open Gov both produce significant advances in Federal transparency, but Open Gov should also produce more participation and collaboration mechanisms.

  • E-gov and Open Gov both are “unfunded mandates” and must be implemented with existing resources.

  • E-gov and Open Gov both rely heavily on web-enabled technology adoption, but many Open Government-related technologies (i.e. social media tools) are rapidly evolving.

  • E-gov has largely become a compliance exercise for the Chief Information Officer (CIO), but Open Gov expands the responsibility for openness outside the CIO organization.

OMB should strive to delay, for as long as possible, the point at which the momentum supporting Open Gov is converted to devoting staff time to a reporting compliance exercise. Some reporting is valuable and necessary to ensure broad milestones are met across the Federal Government. However, just how far Open Gov will take us towards E-democracy will be highly determined by how effectively culture changes as a result of this effort—not how frequently or well Agencies report. There are several opportunities to direct the Open Gov momentum onto the right track right now—and there is a narrow window. OMB should focus on the following opportunities to help avoid a compliancy fate:


  • Provide Agencies with tools and methodologies to implement the Open Government Directive in order to prevent an attitude of compliant reporting. The Department of Transportation has started developing such a best practice methodology.

  • Support and facilitate best practice sharing and shared services to ease Open Government adoption since most Open Government efforts are not funded.

  • Tie in Enterprise Architecture from the beginning of the effort in order to identify where cost savings through IT consolidation can be applied to new Open Gov efforts.

  • Re-evaluate how E-gov and Open Gov efforts and reporting should and could be combined to eliminate redundant reporting requirements on the Agencies.

  • Advocate for authorization and appropriation for a PMO for E-democracy efforts that encompass both E-gov and Open Gov.

3 comments:

Gwynne Kostin said...

I think its a great idea to trace the arc between e-gov and and the Open Gov initiatives. I would like to extend it back one more administration to the ReInventing Government efforts of the Clinton/Gore days.

When you extend to the early efforts from the beginning of the dot-com boom to the enabling technologies of the Open Gov days you can see more differences.

E-gov to a large degree is a continuation of making government more efficient and breaking down silos between agencies. The e-gov initiatives like recreation.gov or grants.gov recognized that people cared more about getting stuff done in government than who was doing it.

The current Open Gov efforts are less about easing transactions in the government bureaucracy and more about government interaction with folks. That's a big difference.

Thanks for the good post, Jenn.

Bev Godwin said...

Great Post. Great series of posts on Open Gov. I particularly like your statement: OMB should strive to delay, for as long as possible, the point at which the momentum supporting Open Gov is converted to devoting staff time to a reporting compliance exercise.

Jenn Gustetic said...

Thank you ladies, for your thoughtful comments.

Gwynne--Interesting point. In the next round/revision I will expand the analysis to include the Reinventing Government initiatives. Given the history we have to learn from here I think its even more exciting looking towards the future.

Bev--One of the key ways OMB can delay the compliance mentality is by exploring the huge resource issues we'll confront soon with Open Gov efforts. E-Gov at least gets some funding through MOUs for shared services, but funding for many Open gov programs and platforms (for example, TSA's IdeaFactory has a program office of no less than 5 people to support it!) is really a crucial issue.

Thank you for your thoughts!

Jenn

 

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