Data

Face-to-Face, Online, or Both?
Online
General Type of Method
Evaluation, oversight, and social auditing
Spectrum of Public Participation
Inform
Links
OpenGovernment is being Redesigned
Participatory Politics Foundation - Projects
Open to All or Limited to Some?
Open to All
Types of Interaction Among Participants
No Interaction Among Participants
Facilitation
No
Decision Methods
Not Applicable
Scope of Implementation
Metropolitan Area
Regional
City/Town

METHOD

OpenGovernment.org TEST

October 13, 2021 pan
August 21, 2021 Zaria Channer
August 2, 2021 Paul Nollen
January 23, 2011 Paul Nollen
Face-to-Face, Online, or Both?
Online
General Type of Method
Evaluation, oversight, and social auditing
Spectrum of Public Participation
Inform
Links
OpenGovernment is being Redesigned
Participatory Politics Foundation - Projects
Open to All or Limited to Some?
Open to All
Types of Interaction Among Participants
No Interaction Among Participants
Facilitation
No
Decision Methods
Not Applicable
Scope of Implementation
Metropolitan Area
Regional
City/Town

OpenGovernment.org is PPF’s open-source version of OpenCongress for government at any level, initially launched in 2011, to increase civic engagement and government transparency.

Problems and Purpose

OpenGovernment was designed to bring the OpenCongress model of transparency down to state and local governments. It was developed in response to a trend toward lower trust in government institutions like the U.S. Congress, low voter turnout, and lack of compliance with the Principles of Open Government Data by US state governments. Out of the 49 bicameral state legislatures in the U.S. and one unicameral body (Nebraska), only one single chamber—one entity out of 99, namely the New York State Senate—makes its legislative data available in ways that sufficiently comply with the community-generated Eight Principles of Open Government Data. Every other chamber of state government was thought to be closed-off from its constituents, refusing to release public data (legislative actions, votes, bill analysis—not to mention campaign contributions) online in ways that are truly open, despite the readily available technical means to do so. The ultimate mission of OpenGovernment was to ensure that all three branches (executive, legislative, and judicial) at every level of government (federal, state, city, local, and more) comply with the Principles of Open Government Data, to increase trust in the political process.

Further, PPF perceived the status quo for state-level government websites to be a mishmash of non-standards-based, poorly-designed websites that don't do nearly enough to keep the public at large informed. They're simply unacceptably user-unfriendly, so they aimed to introduce open-source software, open standards, flexible copyright licensing, and easily-findable technical best practices make it possible for any branch of state government to comply with the Eight Principles in a relatively short period of time.

Origins and Development

The site is a non-partisan joint project of two 501(c)3 non-profit organizations, the Participatory Politics Foundation and the Sunlight Foundation. OpenGovernment is independent from any government entity, candidate for office, or political party. It was based on the model of PPF's OpenCongress, which was conceived in 2004 to address a lack of accessible information online about bills, votes, and issues in the U.S. Congress. The official website of Congress, THOMAS, published raw data about legislation, but not in ways that are compliant with the community-generated Principles of Open Government Data, not in sufficiently timely ways, and not on webpages that were proven to be user-friendly. The platform was acquired by Sunlight Foundation in 2014 but has since returned to the PPF [1].

Ever since OpenCongress was developed, PPF foresaw that this model of aggregating disparate data sources into a user-friendly web interface could be productively applied to other entities: state legislatures, city councils, neighbourhood associations, international institutions, governorships, secretaries of state, supreme courts, circuit judges, public-mission institutions such as schools & hospitals, foreign countries with more-or-less democratic systems of governance, and more.

How It Works

PPF aims to establish a data standard and collect machine-readable data streams for all 50 U.S. State Legislatures. These data streams will provide official government info to GovKit, the open-source application that combines it with other publicly-available data sources and social wisdom from around the open Web. GovKit, in turn, will power the OpenGovernment website: essentially, free and non-partisan versions of OpenCongress for all fifty state legislatures and a dozen major cities, with even more local versions planned.

"OpenGovernment can work to combine the following:

  • official government data in federal, state and city government
  • with campaign donations and intelligible top-line analysis
  • issue group ratings,
  • social media conversations,
  • public meeting schedules,
  • and open-data contact tools." [1]

Analysis and Lessons Learned

See Also

Participatory Politics Foundation

AskThem.io

References

[1] Participatory Politics Foundation. Projects. http://www.participatorypolitics.org/projects/

External Links

GovKit

Notes

This entry was originally submitted as an organization and was converted to a tool to meet Participedia's definitional standards.