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Publications
Series:
- Policy, Politics & Governance
- Changing Government
POLICY, POLITICS & GOVERNANCE
SERIES
Over the last decade, governments in OECD countries
have been experimenting with new tools, ranging from Internet technologies
to community partnerships. They could greatly improve government and
democracy. But it is increasingly clear that these tools change how
modern governments work, what they do and how they make decisions.
Learning to use them well will require experimentation and careful
analysis from the public service. It will require informed debate,
strong leadership and good decision-making from politicians. This
series, produced by the KTA Centre for Collaborative Government, is
dedicated to exploring the issues from both points of view.
Vol
1: Information as a Public Resource: Leading Canadians into the
Information Age
Modern governments contain huge amounts of
data and information, which they currently store in a host of separate
systems. Increasingly, e-government will penetrate these systems,
liberating much of the information from its isolation and obscurity.
This paper, written by Donald Lenihan, Director of the Centre for
Collaborative Government, and Tony Valeri, MP for Stoney Creek,
examines how governments could balance the demand that they liberate
their information holdings with the demand that they provide reliable,
authoritative information.
Vol
2: Horizontal Government: The Next Step
This paper, written by Donald Lenihan, Director of the Centre for Collaborative Government, and Tony Valeri, MP for Stoney Creek, sketches some of the emerging links between planning and reporting, policy development and coordination, and program delivery. It identifies a critical next step along the path to realizing the results agenda. And, it discusses some issues and challenges around our proposal to develop an alternative approach to funding. Volumes 3 - 6 of this series focus specifically
on the issue of government accountability and aim at promoting discussion
of new ideas and issues around accountability for results. These
publications were developed in consultation with politicians, public
servants and journalists, and were sponsored by the Certified General
Accountants Association of Canada, Citizenship and Immigration Canada,
Environment Canada, the Office of the Auditor General and Treasury
Board Secretariat.
Vol
3: Results Reporting, Parliament and Public Debate: What's New in
Accountability?
This paper is the first in a series of three
papers on government accountability by Donald Lenihan, Director
of the Centre for Collaborative Government, John Godfrey, M.P. for
Don Valley West and John Williams, M.P. for St. Albert. It explains
how accountability has been understood in the past and how results-based
accountability differs from it. The paper goes on to assess some
of the challenges and opportunities the new trend poses for government,
democracy and public debate in Canada.
Vol
4: Accountability for Learning
Authored by Donald Lenihan, Director of the
Centre for Collaborative Government, John Godfrey, M.P. for Don
Valley West, Tony Valeri, M.P for Stoney Creek, and John Williams,
M.P. for St. Albert, thispaper explores the challenges to learning
created by our current model of accountability, the importance of
government being accountable for its learning, and some practical
steps that will help the public policy community reach this goal.
Vol
5: What is Shared Accountability?
Authored by Donald Lenihan, Director of the
Centre for Collaborative Government, John Godfrey, M.P. for Don
Valley West, Tony Valeri, M.P for Stoney Creek, and John Williams,
M.P. for St. Albert, thispaper considers what a collaborative model
of accountability might look like, how it might work, and what impact
it might have on minsterial accountability.
Vol
6: From Ideas to Action: Towards Seamless Government
In the coming years, government will be investing
millions of dollars to put in place the information technology infrastructure
and integrated service delivery processes necessary to make citizen-centred,
seamless government a reality. Yet to be successful, innovative
approaches to procurement will be required. Authored by Maryantonett
Flumian (Associate Deputy Minister, HRDC), Michelle d'Auray (Chief
Information Officer, TBS), and Tony Valeri (MP for Stoney Creek),
this paper opens discussion on options for and issues around creating
new kinds of partnering relationships between government and the
private sector to meet this challenge
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
Vol
7: Finding an Aboriginal Digital Voice
A great deal has been written in recent years
about the promise Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs)
hold for better, more efficient and more democratic government.
This Paper tries to see if whether or not the general conception
of e-government is relevant to, and fits the needs of, Aboriginal
peoples in Canada.
Vol 8: Democratic Renewal: Solutions in Search of a Problem
Many democratic renewal initiativeshave begun to take hold across the country. However, these efforts arefar from a co-ordinated development; in fact, there seem to be as many approaches to democratic reform and renewal as there are initiatives. But what they are all tapping into is a collective desire to re-examine how government works for citizens and how citizens connect to their governments. Taken together, they represent a national laboratory on civic engagement, one where the experiments could lead to a huge shift in how we define democracy for the future
Vol 9: Putting Pubilc Services in the Public Eye: Making the Political Case for Citizen-Centred Government
Getting and maintaining political attention for citizen-centred government is necessary but challenging. True collaboration to achieve the seamless service that citizens demand means action and leadership from public servants and politicians. This paper explores why service improvement needs more attention from political leaders, and examines a new agreement that is a hopeful new development for achieving citizen-centred service
CHANGING GOVERNMENT SERIES
The KTA Centre for Collaborative Government's
Changing Government publication series develops contemporary themes
in public sector management and governance and will report on the
outcomes of specific action-research projects.
VOLUME
1: Collaborative Government In The Post-Industrial Age: Five Discussion
Pieces
As governments enter the Information Age,
a key challenge will be to manage the transition to a new collaborative
or networking model while strengthening democratic values and principles.
These articles discuss the premise that countries such as Canada
are changing from industrial to knowledge-based societies and focus
on the central theme that collaboration is the appropriate democratic
response.
VOLUME
2: Opening The E-Government File: Governing In The 21st Century
This paper considers what e-government is,
how it may change government, what that may mean for Canadians,
and what must be done to ensure that e-government is not only faster,
smarter government but also more open, accountable, transparent,
fair, and respectful of individual privacy. The paper was a primer
for the Crossing Boundaries conference, held on March 28-30, 2001,
which was the concluding stage in the Crossing Boundaries project.
The project aims at creating a more informed discussion of e-government
in Canada.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
3: Measuring Quality Of Life: The Use Of Societal Outcomes By Parliamentarians
The Library of Parliament asked the Centre
for Collaborative Government to organize a series of three seminars
that brought together parliamentarians, senior public servants and
members of the policy community to explore the actual and potential
political impact of societal indicators and to assist parliamentarians
who wished to use these new tools of governance for the 21st Century
more effectively. This paper is a thoughtful primer on the topic
of societal outcomes and measures for use by parliamentarians, and
a basis for further discussion and debate on the topic among politicians,
public servants and the broader policy community.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
4: Leveraging Our Diversity: Canada as a Learning Society
This paper explores the idea that, in a knowledge-based
society, diversity should be recognized as a resource. It proposes
that diversity be viewed as high-grade social capital that has a
significant contribution to make in developing the human capital
needed for the 21st Century. The working assumption is that, properly
leveraged, diversity can become a powerful contributor to learning
and innovation - both crucial conditions for success in a knowledge-based
economy.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
5: Post-Industrial Governance: Designing a Canadian Cultural Institution
for the Global Village
The Department of Canadian Heritage has a
mandate to foster and promote Canadian culture. The Digital Commons
is only one part of a much larger Canadian Heritage initiative to
make Canadian culture available online. What is a digital commons?
Why is the Internet the central vehicle? How would such an institution
work? What public purpose would it serve? This discussion paper
addresses these questions and sets out the storyline for the Digital
Commons.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
6: Realigning Governance: From E-Government to E-Democracy
This publication reflects our effort to produce
a clear, readable account of e-government - a storyline - that synthesizes
current thinking into a single, coherent framework and serves as
a kind of guide for moving forward. This storyline should help e-government
stakeholders understand the issues, challenges and opportunities,
and provide a common point of reference - a vision - on which to
base discussions, planning or debate over specific issues.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
7: E-Government: The Message to Politicians
This publication aims to work toward a clear
vision of e-government that elected representatives at all levels
of government can relate to, understand, and support. It is jointly
authored by the Crossing Boundaries Political Advisory Committee
(PAC), which includes eight elected representatives, along with
the Chair of the CBIII project. Members come from all three levels
of government, a variety of political parties and different regions
of the country.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
8: E-Government: The Municipal Experience
This publication aims at deepening our understanding
of e-government at the municipal level. This discussion paper is
based on interviews with municipal leaders from across Canada and
a discussion of key issues at the Crossing Boundaries Municipal
Roundtable, held in Hamilton on June 2, 2002 at the Federation of
Canadian Municipalities Annual General Meeting.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
9: E-Government, Federalism and Democracy: The New Governance
This publication considers the long-term
impact of the technology on pluralism, federalism and democracy
in Canada. The paper suggests that a tension may be emerging between,
on one hand, the increasing pluralism and diversity of civil society
and, on the other, the drive to alignment and integration behind
seamless government. It proposes a new vision of Canada for the
21st century and sketches a strategy to help balance the competing
visions by realigning some basic governance practices.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
10: A Question of Standards: Accounting in the 21st Century
This publication is intended to report on
and provoke stakeholder and public debate about the future of accounting
standards setting in Canada, especially in regard to the possible
loss of public trust following the accounting scandals in the United
States. This report was developed with the advice and input of a
discussion group organized by the Centre for Collaborative Government,
with support from the Certified General Accountants of Canada.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
11: Finding our Digital Voice: Governing in the Information Age
This publication was the basis for the agenda
of the Crossing Boundaries National Conference and contains significant
recommendations on the future direction of e-governance in Canada.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici
VOLUME
12: Governance in the Agreement on Internal Trade
This
discussion paper examines the Agreement on Internal Trade from a
governance perspective, and explores some new directions for enhancing
the effectiveness of the Agreement at its 10th anniversary,
especially on issues related to stakeholder involvement in the implementation
of the Agreement and its dispute resolution process. This report
was developed in consultation with a small working group made up
of trade experts,
public servants,
politicians, and
representatives of industry and civil society, and with the support
of the Certified General Accountants Association of Canada.
Aussi disponible en français. Cliquez ici

Publications
The Aboriginal Practice Group is often at
the forefront of Aboriginal developments in Canada. Our collaborative
work with the Crossing Boundaries Aboriginal Voice initiative has
spawned several publications, the first of which is Politics,
Policy & Governance:Finding
an Aboriginal Digital Voice the second of which is Politics, Policy & Governance:
Aboriginal Culture in a Digital Age
Social-Cultural Impacts of Aboriginal Cultural Industries: A Discussion Paper This discussion paper serves as a preliminary examination of the social and cultural impacts of Aboriginal cultural industries on Aboriginal people, communities, and mainstream Canada.
Répercussions socioculturelles des industries culturelles autochtones: Document de travail Le présent document de travail constitue un examen préliminaire des répercussions sociales et culturelles des industries culturelles autochtones sur les peuples et les collectivités autochtones ainsi que sur la population canadienne en général.
IASC Final Report (University of Winnipeg)
ICT in Aboriginal Communities: Increasing Aboriginal Social Capital(2008). A discussion paper on information and communication technology (ICT) as it relates to Aboriginal social capital.
Aboriginal Governance in 2015 (Queens University) An analysis of the state of Aboriginal governance in Canada in 2015 under various globalization and Canadian federal state scenarios.
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