united kingdom e-government strategy andrew stott uk transparency board formerly deputy cio, uk...
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United Kingdom e-Government Strategy Andrew Stott UK Transparency Boardformerly Deputy CIO, UK Government and Director, data.gov.uk
Bahrain22 April 2014 0.1b
@dirdigengandrew.stott@dirdigeng.com
Five Pillars of e-Government in the UK
Open Data
Digital by Default
Common Approach to Infrastructure
Project Control
Innovation
2
What is Open Data?
4
Open data is data
that can be freely used,
reused and redistributed
by anyone for any purpose.
6
Government Data
Big Data Open Data
Prescriptions
MedicalRecords
National Security Data
Network Rail
Store Cards
GovernmentSpending
RailTimetables
Open Data backed by two Prime Ministers
7
“Public information does not belong to Government, it belongs to the public.”
“Greater transparency will enable the public to hold politicians and public bodies to account”
Objectives of Open Data
New Economic and Social Value
Improved public services
More Transparent Government
8
Objectives of Open Data
New Economic and Social Value
Improved public services
More Transparent Government
9
Objectives of Open Data
New Economic and Social Value
Improved public services
More Transparent Government
16
Open Data used to drive Citizen Engagement
20
Local team
Telephone, website, Facebook and Youtube ….
Local police
Twitter feed
How YOU can get involved
It’s very local
Accessible data on crime
Attract Inform Engage Action
Objectives of Open Data
New Economic and Social Value
Improved public services
More Transparent Government
21
Organisational Transparency
24
Where the personis in the structure
PayResponsibilities
Contact details
Plus … an unanticipated benefit
New Economic and Social Value
Improved public services
More Transparent Government
25
More Efficient Government
Digital by default
34
Relative costsWeb=1.00
Channel Central Government
Local Government
Web 1 1
Call Centre 20 19
Face to Face 50 57
Saving from making digital the preferred channel: ~£1.7bn/year
Make it quick and easy to do – “while you’re still upset about it”
37Total time: Less than 90 seconds!
United Kingdom G-Cloud
43
“Cloudstore” access to public cloud services
462 suppliers(75% SMEs)
3185 services Re-compete every
6 months “Accredit Once” “G-Host”
Public Services Network
Network of networksCentral and local governmentA range of accredited suppliers, common
standards and competing on price and services
Strict conditions of connection raising‒ Cybersecurity compliance‒ Personnel vetting
Reported 40%-60% savings
44
Project Controls
Central approval of all but the smaller projectsApproval is not certain!Strong presumption against projects >£100m
total costTests against
‒ digital strategy‒ use of common infrastructure‒ open standards/open source‒ innovation
47
Crowd-sourcing regulatory reform
56
40% of comments rated useful by agency50% of regulations will be scrapped/changed
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