Session
Roundtable
Duration (minutes): 90
Format description: A roundtable (preference) or classroom (alternative option) setup is best suited to encourage real engagement between the moderator, speakers, panelists and the audience. As an open forum engagement, dialogue and open discussion on the session topic is key, and the roundtable (or classroom) layout and the 90 minute (preference) duration is best suited (60 minutes is a minimum requirement).
Some of the biggest challenges facing the world include the need to improve environmental and socio-economic sustainability and equity globally, nationally, and locally. Harnessing the transformative potential of digital technologies and the Internet is a key enabler of our drive for sustainable development and in addressing pressing environmental and socio-economic challenges in our cities, towns, and communities. Our cities, towns and communities are essentially a collection of human, social, economic, and cultural networks and are settings in which a sense of belonging and togetherness can be fostered and in which the public processes that support social cohesiveness and development can be optimized and made more efficient and effective. Towards this end, increased attention should be given to assessing the online presence of local government in cities. A logical starting point is assessing the role of cities as service providers and examining city portals as the key mechanism for e-government in such contexts. The Local Online Service Index (LOSI), a multi-criteria index that captures e-government development at the local level, by assessing information and services provided by local governments through official websites, has been designed by UNU-EGOV and UNDESA. The burgeoning interest in e-government development, combined with the growing number of requests for inclusion and representation in the local e-government survey, led the study organizers to establish the LOSI Network. The Division for Public Institutions and Digital Government (DPIDG) of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) and the United Nations University Operating Unit on Policy-Driven Electronic Governance (UNU-EGOV), have established LOSI Network. LOSI Network includes national representative entities that are willing to apply LOSI instrument in their national context, assessing municipalities’ portals. This initiative is resulting in the assessment of a much larger number of local government portals, thus bringing:
- Broader coverage and representation of the status/maturity of local e-government.
- A more comprehensive and complete portrait of local e-government worldwide, with the larger survey sample allowing more accurate insights, more consistent analysis, and the opportunity to better identify the challenges, difficulties and opportunities cities have in common (and where there is divergence).
- The opportunity to engage in broader evidence-based analysis of the online presence of local governments worldwide, with increased capacity for productive comparisons and the ability to identify areas in need of improvement.
- The establishment of a network of experts and practitioners that can share good practices and lessons learned.
Participants are kindly asked to fill in the following questionnaire:
This open forum will present and discuss the learning experiences of the LOSI application in countries as diverse as (alphabetically) Brazil, India, Jordan and Tunisia,. In doing so, the open forum will invite interested parties and potential partners to join the LOSI Network, explore the LOSI methodology, and make constructive suggestions for future adjustments in the methodology focus and criteria. The output of the open forum will be a summary report.
For information on the LOSI Network: https://publicadministration.un.org/egovkb/en-us/About/E-Government-at-…
1) How will you facilitate interaction between onsite and online speakers and attendees? Onsite and online moderator will communicate directly throughout the session to ensure that comments and questions online is brought up in the discussions. Depending on the length of the session approved (90 or 60min) and the volume of online contributions, the online moderator may summarise the questions or contributions on behalf of online participants. The session report will reflect both onsite and online contributions.
2) How will you design the session to ensure the best possible experience for online and onsite participants? All slides will be mirrored both onsite and online. Where possible speakers, panelists and contributing participants will be streamed. Virtual surveys with results being discussed will be applied.
3) Please note any complementary online tools/platforms you plan to use to increase participation and interaction during the session. The organising partners, UNDESA and UNU-EGOV, will advertise the open forum (i.e. date, time, links) within their respective networks and across their social media profiles (e.g. LinkedIN, X, Facebook) to increase the reach of IGF and the session. Similarly, the output and outcomes of the open forum will be discriminated.
- UNU-EGOV - United Nation University Operating Unit on Policy-Driven Electronic Governance.
- UNDESA, DPIDG.
- Dimitrios Sarantis, UNU-EGOV, international organisation.
- Deniz Susar, UNDESA, DPIDG, international organisation.
- Angelica Zundel, UNDESA, DPIDG, international organisation
- Abdulaziz Zakri, DGA, Saudi Arabia
- Manal Al Afad, Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority, UAE
- Yin Huotely, Monitoring and Evaluation Department, Cambodia
- Vannapha Phommathansy, Digital Government Center Ministry of Technology and Communications, Lao PDR
- Dr Gayatri Doctor, CEPT University, India (online)
- Nevine Makram Labib Eskaros, Sadat Academy for Management Sciences, Egypt (online)
- Ayman Alarabiat, Al-Balqa Applied University, Jordan
- Mehdi Limam, The Tunisian E-Governance Society, Tunisia (online)
Dimitrios Sarantis, UNU-EGOV
Deniz Susar, UNDESA
Angelica Zundel, UNDESA
1. No Poverty
10. Reduced Inequalities
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
16. Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
17. Partnerships for the Goals
Targets: Capable, competent, inclusive, sustainable and prosperous cities, towns and communities (SDG 11, 16) are key to end poverty, in an equitable and sustainable manner (i.e. SDG 1, 10). Service delivery is a key driver and a key outcome of strong local institutions (SDG 11, 16). The LOSI Network is an international collaboration between cities and communities location and globally (between network members), anchored in the collaboration of academic and public sector partners domestically and globally, and engagement of international organisations like UNDESA and UNU (SDG 17)
Report
1.There is a gap in applying assessment methods in local e-Government. Consequently, governments and decision makers do not have a clear picture of the status regarding local e-Government development.2.Low Digital Literacy,Funding Scarcity and lack of specialized Human Resource are common findings in countries that show low level development rates in local e-Government.Use of centrally provided platforms can provide a solution to local government
1 Join LOSI Network and apply LOSI in a country with the support of UNU-EGOV and UNDESA 2 Disseminate the assessment results in government decision makers in order to help them take data driven decisions