You are currently browsing the tag archive for the ‘cedem11’ tag.
The Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government 2011 takes place on 5 & 6 of May 2011. Associated events take place on 4, 7 & 8 of May. A detailed conference programme will be available at the conference website by the end of March 2011.
Conference Programm
- 4 May 2011
19:00 Pre-Conference Social Event - 5 May 2011
9:00-19:00: Keynotes, Presentations of Papers, Workshops
20:00: Conference Dinner - 6 May 2011
9:00-19:00: Keynotes, Presentations of Papers, Lightning Talks - 7-8 May 2011
Workshop: eVoting for PhD students
Workshop: Securely Exchanging Information through Technology
For further information visit the conference website.
Register here!
On authors’ demand, CeDEM11 announces an extended deadline for submissions: 16 January 2011
Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government
. 5-6 May 2011
. Krems, Austria
. www.donau-uni.ac.at/cedem
Tracks & Co-Chairs
- E-Participation
- Julia Glidden (21C Consulting, UK)
- Jeremy Millard (Danish Technological Institute, DK)
- Norbert Kerting (Stellenbosch University, ZA)
- Open Data and Open Access
- Andy Williamson (Hansard Society, UK)
- Open Government
- Philipp Müller (University of Salzburg, Business School, AT)
- Axel Bruns (Queensland University of Technology, AUS)
- E-Voting
- Melanie Volkamer (Technical University Darmstadt, GER)
- Thad Hall (University of Utah, USA)
Submissions
- Extended deadline: 16 January 2011
- 12 pages maximum
- Double-blind peer review
Conference Proceedings
- Print version and
- OA online version (eBook).
- Best papers will be published with the OA eJournal JeDEM
Detailed Information
Call for Papers
During the last 10 years, the world has focused on social media and the new forms of societal behaviour, including content generation, collaboration and sharing as well as network organisation. These behaviours and expectations, in particular transparency and access to data, new ways of interacting with government and democratic institutions will continue to develop, and profound changes in society are to be expected. Society has been confronted with Open Government, Open Data and Open Access. What have the experiences been so far? How do these impact society, democratic structures and organisations? What changes occur at citizen level? What are the implications for democracy, society, science and business?
The Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government – CeDEM11 – presents the following Tracks:
E-PARTICPATION
- Julia Glidden (21C Consulting, UK)
- Jeremy Millard (Danish Technological Institute, DK)
- Norbert Kersting (Stellenbosch University, ZA)
OPEN GOVERNMENT
- Philipp Müller (University of Salzburg, Business School, AT)
- Axel Bruns (Queensland University of Technology, AUS)
E-VOTING
- Melanie Volkamer (Technical University Darmstadt, GER)
- Thad Hall (University of Utah, USA)
OPEN DATA and OPEN ACCESS
- Andy Williamson (Hansard Society, UK)
.
Location: Danube University Krems, Austria
Date: 5-6 May 2011
Further Information at the Conference Website: http://www.donau-uni.ac.at/cedem
DEADLINE for SUBMISSIONS: 1 December 2010
In May 2011, the Centre for E-Government hosts the Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government. We would like to ask you to help us deciding what logo we shall use for this conference. Please have a look at the following two logos and make your choice in the poll at the botom of this blog-post. (Now we are also on Facebook – join us)
CeDEM Classic
CeDEM11 – Conference for e-democracy, e-participation and e-voting – brings together e-democracy, e-participation and e-voting specialists working in academia, politics, government and business.
Call for Papers
During the last 10 years, the world has focused on social media and the new forms of societal behaviour, including content generation, collaboration and sharing as well as network organisation. These behaviours and expectations, in particular transparency and access to data, new ways of interacting with government and democratic institutions will continue to develop, and profound changes in society are to be expected. Society has been confronted with “Open Government”, “Open Data” and “Open Access”. What have the experiences been so far? How do these impact society, democratic structures and organisations? What changes occur at citizen level? What are the implications for democracy, society, science and business?
CeDEM11 presents the following tracks, which focus on these changes:
Track: E-participation
Co-chairs: Julia Glidden (21c Consultancy, UK) and Jeremy Millard (Danish Technological Institute, DK)
Track: Open Access and Open Data
Co-chair: Andy Williamson (Hansard Society, UK)
Track: Open Government
Co-chairs: Philipp Müller (University of Salzburg, Business School, AT) and Axel Bruns (Queensland University of Technology, AUS)
Track: E-voting
Co-chairs: Melanie Volkamer (Technical University Darmstadt, GER) and Thad Hall (University of Utah, USA)
Thanks to all particpants, for your blog posts, tweets, videos and pics!
- Axel Bruns is an Associate Professor in the Creative Industries Faculty at Queensland University of Technologyin Brisbane, Australia: http://snurb.info/taxonomy/term/117
- Micah L. Sifry, Personal Democracy Forum, TechPresident, New York, USA Personal Democracy Forum, TechPresident:http://techpresident.com/category/categories/edem10
- Matthew Allen, Researcher, Educator and Net Critic: http://www.netcrit.net/tag/edem10/
- Ismael Peña-López, lecturer and researcher, information Society, Digital Divide: http://ictlogy.net/tag/edem10/
- Video by Bengt Feil - Announcement of the CEDEM11 –„ We call it CeDEM11“: http://www.twitvid.com/P4MBH
- Twitterlist by Robert Harm(http://www.ihrwebprofi.at/lifestream): http://twitter.com/robertharm/edem10-participants
- Twitter Stream #edem10 : http://twitter.com/#search?q=%23edem10
- PEP-Net Interview: Ismael Peña-López by Bengt Feil: http://goo.gl/TklG









