According to the February 2015 Harvard Business Review, Brazil is a “break out” country.
According to the February 2015 Harvard Business Review, Brazil is a “break out” country.
Small detail: although corruption within the Brazilian government (and in Brazil in set an ideal budget for google adsgeneral) plays a fairly significant role in the whole thing, not a word was said about it during the congress. This makes it a bit of a ‘good news show’.
Digital citizenship in South Korea
‘The age of Gov 3.0 is coming, where the government will be transparent, competent and service-orient’, said Doo-Yeong Choi, Vice Minister of the Ministry of Administration and Internal Affairs of South Korea. He present their strategy for ‘citizen happiness in the digital society’. According to South Korea, the necessity of the digital society is bas on three points:
1. Hyperconnectivity (all objects and people are connect as one)
2. Sharing / collaboration (a network has emerg, in which crowdsourcing and collective the course offers to master ntelligence are the starting point)
3. Data-bas economy (the use of open data creates and adds value)
In Korea’s view, a digital government is the opposite of a “legacy” government
In Korea’s view, a digital government is the opposite of a “legacy” governmenAnd what about t
A digital government
South Korea sees six strategic tasks to create a digital government
Australian e-government
Australia had two speakers: John Sheridan (Australian Government Chief Technology Officer, caseno email listor AGCTO), who spoke on Digital Strategy, and Pia Waugh (Director of the Coordination and Government 2.0 Technology and Contracting Division, Department of Finance) spoke on Open Data.
In Australia, 27 percent of residents use social mia every day and 69 percent of Australians say they use these channels at some point. The research John present also shows that more than half of residents consider e-government to be the most important channel for contacting government. At the same time, 37 percent still want to have face-to-face contact.