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Posts tagged "South Korea"

OpenParl News Brief: December 30, 2013

Posted December 30, 2013 at 10:01am by dustinpalmer

News from the OpeningParliament.org community:

In India, one of the newest PMO endorsers, Satark Nagrik Sangathan (SNS), was featured in an article on right to information efforts. Here is an older article on their important efforts. Elsewhere in India, Chaksu Roy of PRS Legislative Research published an article about the need to simplify the language of legislation. The Hindu recently considered the impact of open government data in India.

In Mexico, Eduardo Bohórquez from Transparencia Mexicana and Melissa Ortiz from Fundar appeared on the Congressional Channel’s Pesos y Contrapesos (checks and balances) to discuss Open Parliament.  A study done by Visión Legislativa and Animal Político found that the Senate failed to release complete information to a request about the amount of contracts made between September 2012 and July 2013.  Visión Legislativa wrote an article about budget transparency and how to apply its principles in the context of Mexico. Curul501, in partnership with Visión Legislativa and Borde Político, launched Presupuesto Abierto (Open Budget). We recently highlighted the work of Curul501 in a case study on OpeningParliament.org

In Italy, citizens are demanding more transparency in the work of parliamentary committees. TechPresident recently covered participatory democracy efforts in the country.

Click here to read more.

OpenParl News Brief: October 25, 2013

Posted October 25, 2013 at 4:30am by dustinpalmer

News from the OpeningParliament.org community:

In Spain, the PMO Civio launched a new project called Quién Manda, or “Who Rules?”  The project aims to monitor the interactions of Spanish politicians and officials with corporate leaders by an innovative photo-tagging scheme. Thus far, they’ve identified over 2500 relationships. Recently, a Sunlight Foundation team member worked with Civio in the lead up to the launch. There is still an active crowd-funding campaign for the initiative on Goteo. 

Elsewhere in Spain, a Spanish lawmaker held an attempt at direct democracy related to a transparency bill, a vital effort given Spain’s recent ranking of 75 out of 96 countries on access to information issues. Last month, the Masters of Media project commented on the Spanish status quo and Que Hacen Los Diputados discussed what the Congress needs to provide to ensure transparency.

In PakistanPILDAT released a number of reports, including on: the first meeting of a senate parliamentary friendship group on Afghanistan; the first 100 days of governance at the national and provincial levels; and two reports on the Pakistan-Afghanistan Parliamentary dialogues.

In Venezuela, Transparencia Venezuela released a report on the nation’s budget for the first half of 2013, and condemned corruption in the country and noted the role of civil society in combatting it. Meanwhile Entorno Parlamentario discussed key upcoming bills and opposition to an anti-corruption law.

Click here to read more.

Commenting Period Open: IPU’s Social Media Guidelines for Parliaments

Posted October 16, 2012 at 1:13pm by andrewmandelbaum-blog

The Inter-Parliamentary Union has recently released a draft Social Media Guidelines for Parliaments, which is open for public comment through November 9th. The Guidelines, which have been authored by former Hansard Society staffer Andy Williamson, target parliamentary staff “who play a role in the institutional use of social media.”

This is a potentially very useful resource for use by PMOs in discussions with parliamentary staff, particularly in countries where it is believed that the institution of parliament has limited role to play in civic education (see Declaration on Parliamentary Openness provision 4 on Promoting Civic Education). Although social media may not be the best means of transmitting some information, it is a low cost way to potentially reach a diverse and broad swath of citizens. 

While a number of techniques for social media adoption by parliaments are shared (from Trinidad and Tobago to Chile and South Korea), section 8.2 on “Partnering with Third Parties” to strengthen citizen engagement is limited to the UK context. Are any PMOs collaborating with parliaments to bolster their outreach to citizens through social media?

Please feel free to forward comments to [email protected] for the attention of PMO Network member Andy Richardson.