E-Business Library > Gates Project 19: Considering e-Government

http://internationaldemoblog.blogspot.com [DemoBlog] According to i4donline, the Council of Ministers allocated $800 million for an e-government project that will bring 150 government service and 1,000 "subsidiary services" under an e-government system. I doubt this new system will allow citizens to take any part in the higher functions of govern like law-making and oversight in the famously opaque monarchical system.

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http://internationaldemoblog.blogspot.com [Internationaldemoblog.blogspot.com] DemoBlog: The final proposal is for a program to nurture innovation in the area of e-advocacy in the global south. The program would be run by a coalition of global south organizations and would carry out many activities such as: a fellows program to develop e-advocacy leaders in the region, conferences and convenings to allow innovators from different countries and fields to meet and share ideas face-to-face, cataloguing and pointing to the different advocacy tools already available in order to raise awareness of e-advocacy options, prizes for innovation in various e-advocacy fields both to encourage and reward innovators.

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com [Lawprofessors.typepad.com] Law Librarian Blog: Scholarship: The UN Global E-Government Readiness Report 2005: From E-government to E-Inclusion, exploring the interlinkages between e-government and development, presents an assessment of the countries according to their state of e-government readiness and the extent of e-participation worldwide. In Part I of Report, The UN Global E-government Survey 2005, like its predecessors, ranks the 191 Member States of the UN according to a quantitative composite index of e-readiness based on website assessment, telecommunication infrastructure and human resource endowment.

Peterlevine.ws[Peterlevine.ws] Peter Levine's Weblog: April 2003: The vocabulary is famously huge, the syntax is supple, and there are narrative techniques for all occasions. As an example of perceptive modern prose, consider James Joyce's spare description of Leopold Bloom in a hearse:

[Gregwalton.civiblog.org] Greg Walton :: Policing the Spectrum: And back in 1990-2000, he was writing speeches for Bill Clinton in which the former president argued strenuously that doing business in China would be a democratizing force.

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