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stan mag

Comment enseigner les comportements écologiques ? L'expérience du « dilemme d... - 0 views

  • si on s’adresse à des individus « grégaires », il suffit de « réactiver la croyance », de confirmer qu’ils participent bien à un mouvement de plus grande ampleur en faveur de la sauvegarde de la planète.
  • On joue en réalité sur la tendance de l’individu à mesurer l’opinion sociale de son entourage et à s’y conformer par peur d’être marginalisé.
Arnault Coulet

Valuable Games » Blog Archive » My.BarackObama.com as Augmented Reality Game - 0 views

  • what made MyBO revolutionary, and what puts it in the same category as World Without Oil, is that it also asked participants to engage in non-digital, non-virtual activity
  • Perhaps the biggest problem of MyBO as a game was its failure to scale. It was disheartening to log in and see that you were in 266,442nd place
  • But the system would have been far more motivating if your cohort group was more local: all Obama supporters in your state, city, or your MyBO groups.
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  • Some were upset by the change, which demonstrated that the points really did motivate some. Wrote one of the top 500: “GIVE ME MY POINTS BACK!!!! THEY DO NOT BELONG TO YOU!!!!!”
  • Full disclosure: including one I’m now working on a civic engagement game for Fair Trade).
Arnault Coulet

Le fonctionnaire n'est pas encore 2.0 - 1 views

  • Médias sociaux et interaction en ligne avec les autorités, ces deux thèmes ne disent rien à de nombreux fonctionnaires.
  • Voilà ce qui ressort d’une enquête réalisée par Indigov auprès de 556 fonctionnaires (néerlandophones), dont les résultats seront présentés aujourd’hui lors de la journée d’étude Ambtenaar 2.0. Les avis sur internet sont univoques chez quasiment tous les fonctionnaires: internet est utile, voire essentiel dans l’exécution de leur travail. Trois quarts d’entre eux ont accès à tous les sites web. Seul 0,5 pour cent n’a pas accès à internet. Un dixième des fonctionnaires éprouve cependant quelques difficultés à maîtriser internet.
  • Beaucoup de fonctionnaires ne recourent pas aux médias sociaux. La plupart connaissent cependant les grands noms dans le domaine (Facebook, Twitter, Netlog, LinkedIn). Mais un fonctionnaire interrogé sur trois n’est pas actif sur les réseaux sociaux et n’y possède pas de compte. Et quand ils y disposent d’un ou de plusieurs compte(s), les fonctionnaires choisissent Facebook (53%), suivi par LinkedIn (31%), Twitter (10%) et Netlog (10%). Plus de 4 fonctionnaires sur 10 requièrent une formation pour utiliser les médias sociaux. Autre point étonnant: plus d’un tiers des participants à l’enquête (35%) estime que les pouvoirs publics doivent dialoguer avec le citoyen par le biais des sites de socialisation. 29 pour cent n’est cependant absolument pas au courant de la présence de son service public sur un réseau social.
Arnault Coulet

Twitter e-solidarity : Hope for Haiti now - 0 views

  • Haiti needs our hope and our help. We encourage everyone to engage and stay connected—the life cycle of this humanitarian endeavor must extend long after the initial burst of compassion. Communication and hope during events like these are important, but real participation on even the most modest level is critical. On this page, you'll find resources we've researched to help you learn about what’s happening in and around Haiti as well as simple and effective methods to donate directly to the cause.Thanks, Biz Stone & Evan Williams
Arnault Coulet

#regionales Le Web, réceptacle des déceptions de l'UMP - 0 views

  • Le député résume bien trois des principales critiques faites par les élus du parti présidentiel comme par les militants : l’ouverture à gauche, l’échec du débat sur l’identité nationale et une politique pro-écologiste qui n’a fait que déboussoler l’électorat UMP. Sur son blog, Claude Gloasguen, député de Paris, dénonçait ansi, vendredi, “l’ouverture pratiquée”, qui “ne correspond pas à ce qu’attendaient nos électeurs en 2007″. Même chose pour Lionnel Luca, député des Alpes-Maritimes, qui fustige “le strabisme présidentiel de gauche avec l’ouverture”. Le député de Paris Bernard Debré critique également avec force la responsabilité de l’Elysée dans ce triple échec : ”Une taxe carbone, pourquoi ? D’ailleurs elle est oubliée, voici des voix supplémentaires pour les écolos. Identité nationale : débat subi, débat stoppé. Voici des voix pour le Front national. Ouverture à tout va, qui se traduit dans l’idée des électeurs : gauche et droite interchangeables… Voici des voix pour l’abstentionnisme”.
  • Sur le Net, le trouble est perceptible jusque dans les sites officiels du parti. La plateforme participative Créateurs de possibles s’est enrichie de nouvelles “initiatives”, comme “créer une chambre consultative des membres du Conseil national”. Alexandre B., à l’origine de l’idée, exige que “ces militants, ces cadres du parti soient écoutés et respectées…comme il se doit”. Dans l’initiative “Se mobiliser pour le 2e tour”, Jacques P. écrit une longue critique du monde politique, qu’il conclut par ces mots : “La république est perçue par beaucoup de gens comme “bananière”… Pour mobiliser il faut croire… Ce n’est pas le cas…”
  • Même ambiance sur le forum officiel des Jeunes Populaires. Un membre nommé Foetus explique : “Au passage, les gentils messieurs de l’UMP qui voient dans les abstentionnistes leur réserves de voix pour le second tour, feraient bien de se demander si les jeunes de 18 à 20 ans sont leur plus fidèle soutien et la plus enthousiaste des classes d’âge pour les belles réformes de l’actuel président de la République”. Avant d’ajouter, plus loin dans la conversation : “L’UMP a joué avec les peurs et la xénophobie, c’est en partie pour cette raison que les électeurs de droite se sont abstenus”.
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  • Autre blogueur plutôt situé à droite, CaReagit estime que “N. Sarkozy s’est déraciné de sa base électorale historique et c’est en cela que cette élection est une catastrophe pour l’UMP”.
  • Yves Thréard, éditorialiste au Figaro et peu soupçonnable d’adhérer aux idées du PS, se fait aussi l’écho de cette défiance croissance sur son blog. Dans un billet au vitriol titré “Sarkozy, l’UMP et le déni de réalité”, il explique : “la gifle de dimanche et le haut niveau d’abstention s’expliquent en grande partie par un rejet grandissant de Nicolas Sarkozy.
stan mag

Speech on Building Britain's Digital Future | Number10.gov.uk - 0 views

  • We’re determined that government websites should be efficient and meet people’s needs - easy to find, easy to use, and fully accessible. And in our relentless drive to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the way we use websites to meet this goal, we have already closed 900 now unnecessary government websites, with plans to close nearly 500 more. And we will set new challenging standards of quality and accountability for government websites - including a requirement that each one allows feedback and engagement with citizens themselves.  From today no new website will be allowed unless it fully meets these requirements.
  • We’re determined that government websites should be efficient and meet people’s needs - easy to find, easy to use, and fully accessible. And in our relentless drive to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the way we use websites to meet this goal, we have already closed 900 now unnecessary government websites, with plans to close nearly 500 more. And we will set new challenging standards of quality and accountability for government websites - including a requirement that each one allows feedback and engagement with citizens themselves.  From today no new website will be allowed unless it fully meets these requirements.
  • We’re determined that government websites should be efficient and meet people’s needs - easy to find, easy to use, and fully accessible. And in our relentless drive to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the way we use websites to meet this goal, we have already closed 900 now unnecessary government websites, with plans to close nearly 500 more. And we will set new challenging standards of quality and accountability for government websites - including a requirement that each one allows feedback and engagement with citizens themselves.  From today no new website will be allowed unless it fully meets these requirements.
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  • We’re determined that government websites should be efficient and meet people’s needs - easy to find, easy to use, and fully accessible. And in our relentless drive to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the way we use websites to meet this goal, we have already closed 900 now unnecessary government websites, with plans to close nearly 500 more. And we will set new challenging standards of quality and accountability for government websites - including a requirement that each one allows feedback and engagement with citizens themselves.  From today no new website will be allowed unless it fully meets these requirements.
  • With Mygov, citizens will be in control - choosing the content relevant to them and determining their level of engagement. And their feedback will in turn help us to improve services
  • With Mygov, citizens will be in control - choosing the content relevant to them and determining their level of engagement. And their feedback will in turn help us to improve services
  • We know that for every transaction with a public service that is done online rather than over the telephone we can save around £3.30 in administration and staffing costs.  And using the internet rather than filling in paper forms or writing letters can typically save £12 each time
  • We know that for every transaction with a public service that is done online rather than over the telephone we can save around £3.30 in administration and staffing costs.  And using the internet rather than filling in paper forms or writing letters can typically save £12 each time.
  • We know that for every transaction with a public service that is done online rather than over the telephone we can save around £3.30 in administration and staffing costs.  And using the internet rather than filling in paper forms or writing letters can typically save £12 each time.
  • We know that for every transaction with a public service that is done online rather than over the telephone we can save around £3.30 in administration and staffing costs.  And using the internet rather than filling in paper forms or writing letters can typically save £12 each time.
  • We know that for every transaction with a public service that is done online rather than over the telephone we can save around £3.30 in administration and staffing costs.  And using the internet rather than filling in paper forms or writing letters can typically save £12 each time.
  • Revitalising our politics, our governance and our democracy means going beyond simply increased openness about previously secret information - it requires the policy-making monopoly of ministers and the civil service to be challenged - where practicable - through a step change in the opportunities for people to engage with and interact with government in its policy proposals
  • Revitalising our politics, our governance and our democracy means going beyond simply increased openness about previously secret information - it requires the policy-making monopoly of ministers and the civil service to be challenged - where practicable - through a step change in the opportunities for people to engage with and interact with government in its policy proposals
  • The web and the internet offers us a chance to reinvent “deliberative democracy” for the modern age.
  • The web and the internet offers us a chance to reinvent “deliberative democracy” for the modern age.
  • Ultimately this can provide the basis for them to participate in deliberative processes to formulate policy - setting off a historic shift in the way public policy is made.
  • This includes opening more policy development to wider scrutiny, for example through the use of e-petitions and deliberative events
  • Since it was established at the end of 2006, the number 10 e-petitions service has received more than 70 thousand petitions. There have been more than 12 million signatures placed and the Government has replied with more than 8 million e-mail responses. Each week I record a podcast and use twitter most days. Number10.gov.uk carries out daily conversations with more than 1.7 million followers. There have been almost 2 million views of our images on flickr and 4.3 million views of our films and videos on YouTube.
  • identify the far wider scope for deliberative engagements with the public, specifiying the outcome expected from such engagement
  • giving people a greater say over the policies that affect their lives and the services on which they depend.
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    "We're determined that government websites should be efficient and meet people's needs - easy to find, easy to use, and fully accessible. And in our relentless drive to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the way we use websites to meet this goal, we have already closed 900 now unnecessary government websites, with plans to close nearly 500 more. And we will set new challenging standards of quality and accountability for government websites - including a requirement that each one allows feedback and engagement with citizens themselves. From today no new website will be allowed unless it fully meets these requirements."
Arnault Coulet

Greenpeace : les internautes peuvent participer à la construction du Rainbow ... - 0 views

  • Via les réseaux sociaux, l'association lance son appel "à contribution" à la construction du nouveau navire - Chacun peut donc en se rendant sur ce nouveau site doté de la techno e-commerce, faire le choix de la pièce qu'il souhaite acheter: un radar, un stylo, un GPS, une cuillère, un kit de survie .... Le choix est large, la contribution peut aller de 1 à 7000 €. Après validation de l'achat, un certificat sera envoyé au contributeur qui pourra le partager à loisir sur ses réseaux favoris. L'ensemble de la liste des contributeurs est consultable sur le site et sera inscrite sur une partie du bateau.
Arnault Coulet

@digiactive what do you think about @evgenymorozov blog post "From slacktivism to activ... - 0 views

  • I've grown increasingly skeptical of numerous digital activism campaigns that attempt to change the world through Facebook and Twitter.
  • He started a Facebook group, which implied – but never stated so explicitly – that the city authorities were planning to dismantle the fountain, which of course was NEVER the case. He seeded the group to 125 friends who joined in a matter of hours; then it started spreading virally. In the first few days, it immediately went to a 1000 members and then it started growing more aggressively. After 3 days, it began to grow with over 2 new members each minute in the day time. When the group reached 27.500 members, Jørgensen decided to end the experiment. So there you have it: almost 28,000 people joined a cause that didn't really exist!
  • "just like we need stuff to furnish our homes to show who we are, on Facebook we need cultural objects that put together a version of me that I would like to present to the public."
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  • acebook users shape their online identity implicitly rather than explicitly
  • This shopping binge in an online identity supermarket has led to the proliferation of what I call “slacktivism”, where our digital effort make us feel very useful and important but have zero social impact
  • In a perfect world, this shouldn't even be considered a problem: better donate a penny than not to donate at all. The problem, however, is that the granularity of contemporary digital activism provides too many easy way-outs: too many people decide to donate a penny where they may otherwise want to donate a dollar
  • The problem is that most of these campaigns do not have clear goals or agenda items beyond awareness-raising.
  • Asking for money could also undermine one's efforts to engage groups members in more meaningful real-life activities: the fact that they have already donated some money, no matter how little, makes them feel as if they have already done their bit and should be left alone
  • Some grassroots campaigns are beginning to realize it: for example, the web-site of "Free Monem", a 2007 pan-Arab initiative to free an Egyptian blogger from jail carried a sign that said “DON'T DONATE; Take action” and had logos of Visa and MasterCard in a crossed red circle in the background
  • his was a way to show that their campaign needed more than money as well as to shame numerous local and international NGOs that like to raise money to “release bloggers from jail”, without having any meaningful impact on the situation on the ground.
  • Psychologists offer an interesting explanation as to why a million people working together may be less effective than one person working alone. They call this phenomenon “social loafing”.
  • Reading about Ringelmann's experiments, I realized that the same problem plagues much of today's “Facebook” activism:
  • For example, FreeRice, a web-site affiliated with the UN Food Program
  • This is a brilliant approach: millions of people rely on the Internet to study English anyway and most of them wouldn't mind being exposed to online advertising in exchange for a useful service. Both sides benefit, with no high words exchanged. Those who participate in the effort are not driven by helping the world and have a very selfish motivation; yet, they probably generate more good than thousands of people who are “fighting” hunger via Facebook. While this model may not be applicable to every situation, it's by finding practical hybrid models like FreeRice's that we could convert immense and undeniable collective energy of Internet users into tangible social change.
  • on't give people their identity trophies until they have proved their worth
    • Arnault Coulet
       
      clé
  • create diverse, distinctive, and non-trivial tasks; your supporters can do more than just click “send to all” button” all day.
    • Arnault Coulet
       
      second point
Rem Palpitt

Pew: Online Participatory Class is Young and Growing (via @fondapol) - 0 views

  •  
    the more interesting finding of the Pew study is that there's a new "pig in the python" in the generation of younger people who are using the Internet for political purposes at levels that literally blow everyone else off the charts
Arnault Coulet

Meilcour.fr » Dix choses que je retiens du Personal democracy forum 2009 - 0 views

  • La révolution de Vivek Kundra est majeure, et de deux ordres. Premièrement, il considère que la donnée sur l’action publique est un bien public, qui doit être mis à sa disposition, de manière brute.
  • l’objectif de transparence intégrale. Le premier exemple dévoilé par Vivek Kundra donne une idée de l’ampleur de l’ambition : usaspending va permettre à chacun de suivre les dépenses de l’administration, et les projets associés. Première application sur les dépenses IT des ministères
  • Le volet “participation du public” dans le gouvernement Obama n’est pas celui qu’on a imaginé les années précédentes, et même l’année dernière, au PDF. De fait, c’était décevant. L’amateurisme des équipes d’Obama qui ont testé des logiques de débat et collaboration en ligne contraste énormément avec la vision profonde et révolutionnaire de la stratégie d’information
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  • On a peu parlé de la poursuite de la mobilisation militante dans le gouvernement, de la manière dont l’administration Obama tente de poursuivre le mouvement avec Organizing for America. De fait, de ce que j’ai compris des bruits de couloir, l’initiative manque de souffle. On mobilise un peu pour soutenir la réforme du Health Care System, mais l’équipe n’a plus les mêmes moyens, la même connexion, le même but fort et rassembleur.
Arnault Coulet

Cyberwar, un avenir pour l'Iran ? | le blog de Julie Coudry at juliecoudry.com - le blo... - 0 views

  • Possible aussi de participer à des sites communautaires pour être directement destinataire et relai d’information en provenance d’Iran. Avec twitter bien sûr mais aussi en s’inscrivant comme correspondant de la liberté sur certains sites et des blogs.
stan mag

GSA Clears Path for Government Web 2.0 Use - 0 views

  • The flagship initiative in this space is the Open Government Partnership, an admittedly unprecedented multilateral coalition co-chaired by the U.S. and Brazil that was formally made public in July. Current participants — including the U.S. — are expected on Tuesday to release their plans for open government in the next year
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    GSA Clears Path for Government Web 2.0 Use
Arnault Coulet

10 principles for a Public Administration 2.0 (via @fondapol) - 0 views

  • A decalogue like a work in progress, to promote the idea and the principles of a new Public Administration more able to act and operate in the era of the Nets. This is the “Manifesto Amministrare 2.0”
  • The Venetian event permitted to collect a lot of ideas and suggestions useful to the writing of the document. First of all, anyway, it was very important to understand that many italian Administrations, and inside them politicians, managers and civil servants, are strongly convinced that the Public Administration need to embrace, at least partially, that “web 2.0 philosophy” who is changing the web and, more important, the life of organizations, enterprises and millions of people
  • The role of politics Politicians must be able to take responsibility of their choices. The organizational dimension Public Administrations must change their organization and their procedures, pursuing a new idea of relationship with citizens and abandoning the self-approach. The Net as a right The access to the Net, specially to broadband, must be easy and cheap everywhere. Beyond the cultural divide Citizens must be helped to develop a new digital culture. The involvement of citizens There’s no Public Administration 2.0 without a strong intervention in favour of participation. The multi-channel approach as opportunity Service are really tailored if there’s attention to the channels more appropriate for the different users’ target. Disintermediation to better act To promote a Public Administration no more “one way” and finally “2.0” is important to foster a bigger disintermediation between institutions and citizens. Re-start form the semantics of public contents The semantics presentation of public information, services and contents must be conceived with the final users and open to folksonomies. Software as enabling factor Software used in public sector must be open and re-usable by other administrations. Foster the development of active communities User groups and social networks must be considered as a fundamental stimulus to design public web services, starting from their desires and indications.
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