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PPA 503 – The Public Policy- Making Process Lecture 2d – The Vision of E- Governance.

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Presentation on theme: "PPA 503 – The Public Policy- Making Process Lecture 2d – The Vision of E- Governance."— Presentation transcript:

1 PPA 503 – The Public Policy- Making Process Lecture 2d – The Vision of E- Governance

2 “As We May Think” – Vannevar Bush - 1945  In World War II, science created the greatest engine of destruction that the world had ever seen.  In the post-war period, Bush argued that science would create the greatest engine of knowledge the world had ever seen.  He called it the “memex.”

3 “As We May Think” – Vannevar Bush - 1945  The memex was a striking vision of the information universe at the end of the 20 th century.  An imagined device for storing knowledge (all of an individual’s books, records, letters, and data).

4 “As We May Think” – Vannevar Bush - 1945  The individual could use the memex flexibility to expand her knowledge base but would be simple enough to operate on a desktop or from a distance with translucent screens and keyboards.  He also envisioned hypertext, the complex linking of terms.

5 Competing Theories of Information Technology (IT) and Change  Technological determinism: IT is an unstoppable force in its own right, shaping the world (and government) in profound ways. It would undercut the bureaucratic form.  Reinforcement theory: IT is a tools like any other. It tends to reinforce the structural position of the powers that be.

6 Competing Theories of Information Technology (IT) and Change  Sociotechnical theory: IT is unconstrained by technological determinism or structural forms. It responds to system design. The designer becomes the agent of change.  Systems theory: Design is key, but it is determined by technological, not human, factors. The development of control systems influences outcomes.

7 IT Factor Environment Matrix Factors and Determinants Unconstrained Environment Constrained Environment Technological Factors Systems Theory Technological Determinism Human Factors Sociotechnical Theory Reinforcement Theory

8 The Global Village (1964)  Marshall McLuhan – Technological innovation the engine of change, not control of the means of production (Marx). Technological determinism.  Society would be transformed as television and electronic IT replaced newspapers and print media.

9 The Global Village (1964)  IT would create a global village where everyone could stay in contact with anyone else no matter where they were.  Before ARPAnet or the Internet, McLuhan saw the globalizing influence of an electronic nervous system.  All innovations consist of four processes: retrieval, enhancement, obsolescence, and reversal.

10 The Network Nation (1978)  Hiltz and Turoff – the revolution in information systems would lead to a new epoch of decentralization and democratization. Technological determinism.  Technological advances in communication changed group communication making dominance more difficult.

11 The Network Nation (1978)  Democratization of communication would increase democratization of decision-making.  Actual research suggested that improved communication actually increased managerial control.

12 The Electronic Cottage in the Infosphere (1980)  Alvin Toffler – The Third Wave. First wave – Agriculture Second wave – Industrialization. Third wave – Information age.  Personal freedom arising from telecommuting.  Replicable rather than finite resources.  Also technological determinism.

13 The Network Society (1996)  Maurice Castell  Based on reinforcement theory.  He identified the conflict as a dialectic between informational capitalism of networked international corporations versus social movements and regional efforts to assert unique cultural identities.  Informational capitalism intertwined with rising inequality and social exclusion.  The creation of the Digital Divide.  IT reinforces the powers that be.

14 Smart Communities (1997)  World Foundation for Smart Communities.  Adaptation of IT to meet human needs.  Unconstrained environment.  Calls on communities to consciously adapt IT to help the underprivileged.  Sociotechnical theory.

15 Digital Places (2000)  Thomas Horan.  More moderate version of smart communities assuming that digital places would combine electronic locations with physical locations.

16 E-Government and E-Governance (2000-2002)  Digital government, e-government, e- governance.  Sociotechnical theory.  Technological possibilities translate into technological realities influenced by organizational, political, and cultural environments, with non-deterministic results.  The virtual state cross-cuts traditional agency boundaries creating one-stop service centers.

17 E-Government and E-Governance (2000-2002)  E-government: Broadcasting. Transaction processing. Public records access. Interpersonal communication. Surveying and monitoring.  Clinton administration promoted e- government to reduce government tendency to refuse integration and develop redundant systems.

18 E-Government and E-Governance (2000-2002)  Four stages of e-governance. Presence. Interaction. Transaction. Transformation.


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