Press Release 18 November

Release of “State of the eUnion: Government 2.0 and Onwards” Book

Copenhagen, 18 November 2009.

The future of eGovernment is up for discussion today, when ministers of IT and Technology from all over Europe gather in Malmö, Sweden, for the Fifth Ministerial Meeting and Conference on e-government.

But what is the status of eGovernment? In a new book, published today, 34 global thought-leaders* in the field, including Don Tapscott, Tim O’Reilly and Lawrence Lessig, have contributed their views and ideas about the current state of eGovernment and what has come to be known as Government 2.0.

The book, “State of the eUnion: Government 2.0 and Onwards”, is assembled and published by one of Denmark’s leading government enterprise architects, John Gøtze, PhD.

“In many ways, eGovernment has come of age. The use of IT and digital media is today part of everything government does, so the ‘e’ is becoming obsolete. ‘eGovernment is just Government,’ as the saying goes, but it is important to realise that the ‘e’ has changed government forever, and will keep doing so, and hence we now talk about Government 2.0, ” John Gøtze explains.

As of today, the complete book is available for free online at 21gov.net. The content is licensed under a Creative Commons license, and therefore free to copy and distribute. The printed book is published soon by AuthorHouse, and will be available at Amazon later this year. A printed release version can however be ordered immediately via 21gov.net.

Edited by John Gøtze together with eGovernment consultant Christian Bering Pedersen, the book gives an overview of recent developments in Europe, North America, and Australia. The contributions to the book have all been collected over the last couple of months.

Don Tapscott, one of the world’s top 50 business thinkers, who is keynoting at the ministers’ conference, writes in the book’s foreword: “Every government leader, every elected official and every government employee should read this book and get involved in one of the most exciting challenges of our times – transforming government for effectiveness, relevance and success, enabled by a new medium of communications and required for the emerging citizens of the 21st century. The stakes are very high.”

The book’s contributors touch on a number of different subjects, all related to making government work better. Some deal with getting government data out into the open, breaking down data silos. Others focus on how to interact with the public through interactive websites. Still others discuss how to facilitate organizational change that will open up government.

For further information contact:
John Gøtze, tel +45 5124 5878 or john@gotzespace.dk or gotze@twitter

“State of the eUnion: Government 2.0 and Onwards”
Edited by John Gøtze and Christian Bering Pedersen
Available for free at 21gov.net

Printed editions:
Release version (ISBN: 978‐87‐91936‐01‐2) available now via 21gov.net
Global version published by AuthorHouse (ISBN: 9781449047290) later this year.

*: Contributors are:

  • Richard Allan, Facebook
  • Kim Normann Andersen, Copenhagen Business School
  • Tony Bovaird, Birmingham
 University
  • Lee Bryant, HeadShift
  • Joanne Caddy, OECD
  • Stephen Collins, AcidLabs
  • Dan Doney, US 
Office 
of 
the 
Director 
of 
National
 Intelligence
  • James Downe, Cardiff 
University.
  • Mark Drapeau, National
 Defense
 University
  • Bengt Feil, TuTech
 Innovation
  • Dave Fletcher, State of Utah
  • Michael Friis, Folkets
 Ting
  • Matt Leighninger, Deliberative
 Democracy
 Consortium
  • Lawrence Lessig, Harvard
 Law
 School
  • Rolf Lührs, TuTech
 Innovation
  • Elke Löffler, Governance 
International
  • Rony Medaglia, Copenhagen Business School
  • Philipp S. Müller, Center
 for
 Public
 Management
 and 
Governance
  • David Osimo, Tech4i2
  • Tim O’Reilly, O’Reilly Inc.
  • Tommy Dejbjerg Pedersen, Geekhouse
  • Chris Potts, Dominic Barrow
  • Steve Radick, Booz
 Allen
 Hamilton
  • Harald Rathmann, TuTech
 Innovation
  • Steve Ressler, GovLoop
  • Alexandra Samuel, Social
Signal
  • W. David Stephenson, Stephenson Strategies
  • Hanne Sørum, The
 Norwegian
 School
 of
 Information
 Technology
  • Ariel Waldman, Spacehack.org
  • David Weinberger, Harvard
 Berkman
 Center
 for
 Internet
 &
 Society
  • Olov Östberg, Mid
 Sweden
 University