A few of us travelled from London to a ChangeCamp event in Toronto Tuesday night to help design a civic engagement toolkit: We see the municipal elections in 2010 as an excuse to gather people together to have real dialogues about the future of our communities. We believe that open source approaches can enable those conversations [...]
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change,
changecamp,
co-creation,
collaboration,
collaborative democracy,
conversation,
democracy,
ldnbeta,
participation,
politics,
rhetoric
Generativity: maybe the most important word we’ll use in the next 10 years. It applies to all aspects of the challenges we face: social, technological, cultural, intellectual, economic. There’s a big article in the newest Atlantic that got me thinking about it: How a New Jobless Era Will Transform America: If it persists much longer, this [...]
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development,
future,
generations,
generativity,
history,
innovation,
jonathan zittrain,
progress,
recession,
society,
twitter
Today I was trying to answer this question in a group discussion at AgendaCamp. Most of the time we talked about reasons to not stay in London. Personally, I moved back to London in 2000 after finishing school to regroup before figuring out what to do with my life… And I stayed in London because [...]
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cities,
citizen engagement,
culture,
demographics,
generations,
marketing,
openness,
signaling,
social media,
strategy,
youth culture
I’ve learned not to care as much when other people are being stupid. It’s their problem. Last year I did more blogging in the spirit of “someone’s wrong on the internet,” but lately I’ve learned to lay off and let people screw up. (I’m so kind.) When I started writing about media it was because [...]
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collaboration,
complaints,
criticism,
government,
ideas,
open government,
opinions,
optimism,
pessimism,
politics,
pragmatism
I enthusiastically support Stephen Harper’s decision to prorogue parliament… Here’s why. Proponents of more open, participatory, and directly accountable government have just been handed the best opportunity we could ask for. It’s a turning point in the narrative of centralized power that began with Jean Chrétien’s run in the 90s and has built up ever since. [...]
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activism,
canada,
citizen engagement,
facebook,
government,
open,
parliament,
politics,
prorogation,
public sphere,
slacktivism,
social media,
stephen harper
On the surface the Copenhagen summit was about cutting carbon emissions, but the situation reminds me of Robin Hanson’s well known countrarian notion that politics is not about policy: Civics teachers talk as if politics is about policy, that politics is our system for choosing policies to deal with common problems. But as Tyler Cowen suggests, real [...]
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china,
climate,
climate change,
copenhagen,
environment,
geopolitics,
negotiation,
obama,
power,
signaling
Some thoughts culminating out of the last post about how open standards emerge… a recent post by fellow Londoner Bill Wittur on some open government basics… the latest post on the Google blog defining their notion of openness… and a book I perused a couple days ago by Beth Noveck on open collaborative government. There’s no way I [...]
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beth noveck,
collaboration,
collaborative democracy,
deliberative democracy,
democracy,
google,
open government,
open source,
open standards,
policy,
pragmatism,
think21st,
wiki government
The natural inclination right now for geeks of a certain type is to start dreaming up new standards bodies, or how they can participate in the Open Web Foundation to make a Super Awesome Twitter API Evolution Committee. Here’s my recommendation: Don’t. Don’t do any of that shit, and don’t run off to make membership [...]
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bureaucracies,
collaboration,
copenhagen,
design thinking,
designers' ego,
generativity,
innovation,
open innovation,
organizations,
planning,
rapid prototyping,
think21st,
twitter,
twitter api
by Brian on 12-11-2009
in civics
Interesting clip from a longer film based on The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces by William H. Whyte (probably better-know for his monumental book, The Organization Man). I’m sure some of it is outdated (e.g. nothing about skateboarders… or, MOUNTAIN BIKES!) but most of the observations about human behaviour and interaction I’m sure hold true. Even [...]
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cities,
pedestrians,
people watching,
public spaces,
urban design,
urbanism
Looking at the news, everyone in London seems to be very excited about the CARGO HUB PLAN: Ottawa and the city will unveil big bucks to help London become an international air cargo gateway Whether or not this plan makes solid business sense in the near term is not my concern [clarification: I should say, [...]
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cargo cults,
cargo hub,
culture,
digital interactive gaming,
digital media,
innovation,
innovation clusters,
new economy,
signalling,
transportation
Last week when I read Titus Ferguson’s post about the fact “‘social’ is in ‘social media’ for a reason,” I was reminded of Dan Brown’s column at LFPress.com about how his blog has led to offline friendships. I can relate. Since I started actively engaging people on Twitter a year ago my little bubble has exploded. I [...]
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community,
gdldn,
groups,
social,
social media,
twitter,
web