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Video Recordings from Open Government Partnership Annual Meeting
Australian Electoral Commission adopts CC BY for its website
Open Government Partnership
Research Councils UK proposed policy on Open Access
European survey report on scientific information in the digital age
QUT?s farewell for Professor Brian Fitzgerald
Open Education Week 5-10 March 2012
Vivek Kundra on open data as 'Digital Fuel for the 21st Century'
Chris Luton from the British Geological Survey to deliver a talk in Brisbane
The Australian Bureau of Statistics? road to Open Access
IGF2011 Workshop 123 webcast available online
Video recordings of the Open Government Data Conference are now available
European Commission on the reuse of its documents
European Commission?s Digital Agenda: Turning government data into gold
DEEDI and QPS websites licensed under CC BY
Creative Commons & You public lecture in Cairns
Anne Fitzgerald to present at Digital Information Management Summit 2011
IGF2011 Workshop 123 Final report and transcript now available
LGWN2011 audio recordings now available
Open Government Data Conference and Data Camp a success
Washington Declaration on IP and the Public Interest
Internet Governance Forum (IGF) 2011
UK Open Data Consultation
Open Government Data Conference & Data Camp - Brisbane
Creative Commons seminars in Hobart, Sydney and Townsville
Local Government Webnetwork We Believe In Community 2011 conference
Queensland Government Licence Review Checklist
McKinsey Global Institute's report on Big Data
ACT Chief Minister's vision for open government
Launch of NZGOAL.info
* Professor Beth Noveck and Professor Brian Fitzgerald to give a free talk in Brisbane
New Internet and E-commerce Law book soon to be published
City of Vienna launches open data portal
Google Zeitgeist 2011 keynote: the importance of open government data
Guardian.co.uk?s World Government Data Store
auPSI research helped during flood crisis
Blue Sky: future directions in copyright law a success
Senator Kate Lundy speaks on Open Government and Citizen-centric Services
US National Science Foundation's new rules on sharing scientific data
Open Access: Research-Education-Public Data Conference 2010
Data.gov Concept of Operations and Case Study available
Using Creative Commons in the Public Sector: Open Access to knowledge, culture and Public Sector Information (PSI) held 26 November 2010
CC & Government Guide: Using Creative Commons 3.0 Australia Licences on Government Copyright Materials now available
Open Data Goes Global: Open Government Data Camp 2010
Professor Anne Fitzgerald presents at International Open Government Data Conference, Washington DC
Peter Suber's journey towards open access
Paul Uhlir named winner of the 2010 CODATA prize
UK Open Government Licence and UK Government Licensing Framework launched
Online Survey on the EU PSI Directive
Victorian Government 2.0 Action Plan
IEEE e-Science 2010 Conference
Internet Governance Forum 2010 - Workshop 120
New book Access to PSI: Law, Technology and Policy launched
New book chapter by auPSI team published
Professor Anne Fitzgerald speaks at CC Asia Pacific Conference 2010, Korea
Professor Anne Fitzgerald to speak at DMO Forum 2010
Draft Creative Commons and Government Guide now available online
Gov 2.0 Expo 2010
NZGOAL now entering Cabinet deliberation
Government releases response to Government 2.0 Taskforce report
Professor Anne Fitzgerald speaks at National Library of Australia
World Bank launches Open Data Initiative
U.S. Whitehouse announces Open Government Plans
Professor Anne Fitzgerald to speak at VALA Meeting 2010 on Creative Commons
UK Government launches data.gov.uk
Professor Anne Fitzgerald speaks at LINUX 2010: Open and the Public Sector Mini Conference
Enabling open access to public sector information with Creative Commons Licences: the Australian experience - now available online
Government 2.0 Taskforce releases Final Report
Project report to Government 2.0 Taskforce on copyright law now available
Realising Our Broadband Future - Brisbane Consultation Forum
Compiled Literature Review now available in hard copy
Spatially Enabled Government Summit 2009 presentations now available
NSS releases A Good Practice Guide to Sharing Your Data With Others
Australian Government releases Digital Economy: Future Directions paper
Report on the Inquiry into Improving Access to Victorian PSI released
Brian Fitzgerald appointed to Government 2.0 Taskforce
Prof Anne Fitzgerald and Prof Brian Fitzgerald to speak at Spatially Enabled Government Summit 2009
National Research Infrastructure Committee Announced
The Hon. Lindsay Tanner and Senator Kate Lundy speak at the CeBET Australia conference 2009
Australian Government establishes Office of Information Commissioner
Information Awareness Month launched
The Guardian's Open Platform launched
Appointment of Vivek Kundra as CIO in Obama Administration
International Chapter of Literature Review now available
Google denied access to Victorian fire data
ABS releases data under CC licence
National Information Strategy Seminar - Canberra
auPSI Team advises Federal Government
CRC-SI Conference 2008

Professor Beth Noveck and Professor Brian Fitzgerald to give a free talk in Brisbane

A PDF flyer for this event is available here.

ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation (CCi) and the Queensland University of Technology Faculty of Law invite you to

Government 2.0 – Theory and Practice

Professor Beth Noveck, NYLS and
Professor Brian Fitzgerald, QUT/CCi

Monday 25 July, 1.00 – 2.30 PM
Ground floor, 80A George Street, Brisbane
RSVP by 22 July 2011 online

The potential for web based technologies to reshape the role and practice of government is a question of great interest worldwide. In Australia inquiries into Government 2.0 have sought to understand and propose how the “functionality” of Web 2.0 might be used by government in their everyday affairs of making decisions, servicing the community and developing policy.  In the USA, as has happened in many other countries, the Obama Administration has set in place strategies to investigate and implement the possibilities of this new landscape of blogs, wikis, social networks and mass collaboration.

Professor Noveck has been at the forefront of this work in the USA and internationally. Her book Wiki Government provides conceptual depth to the ideas while her leading role in the Peer to Patent Project and most recently The Open Government Initiative (within the US government) have established her as an expert practitioner in the area. Professor Fitzgerald, a member of the Federal Government’s Gov 2.0 Taskforce in 2009, and his research team at QUT have lead international thinking on new models for licensing of public sector information since their discovery in 2004 that Creative Commons licences could be applied to public sector information. His two volume edited collection on Access to Public Sector Information: Law Technology and Policy is a key resource in this area.

In this talk Professors Noveck and Fitzgerald will speak about their involvement in Government 2.0 initiatives in the USA and Australia over the last two years reflecting on what this means for the operation of government and more broadly the general public. They will consider both at a conceptual and practical level arguments for “collaborative government” as a strategy for creating a more effective and democratic system.

About the speakers

Professor Beth Noveck

Beth Simone Noveck is on leave as a professor of law at New York Law School. Currently an advisor to the British government, she previously served in the White House as the nation’s first Deputy Chief Technology Officer (2009-2011) and leader of the White House Open Government Initiative (www.whitehouse.gov/open).

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation recently awarded Professor Noveck a grant to develop a research agenda to gauge the impact of networks on democratic institutions. In 2010, Professor Noveck was named “One of the Hundred Most Creative People in Business” by Fast Company magazine and “One of the Top 5 Game Changers” by Politico.

She is the author of Wiki Government: How Technology Can Make Government Better, Democracy Stronger, and Citizens More Powerful (Brookings Institution Press, 2009), which will appear this year in Arabic and Chinese. She blogs at http://cairns.typepad.com and tweets at @bethnoveck.

Professor Brian Fitzgerald

Professor Brian Fitzgerald BA (Griff) LLB (Hons) (QUT)  BCL (Oxon.) LLM (Harv.) PhD (Griff) studied law at the Queensland University of Technology graduating as University Medallist in Law and holds postgraduate degrees in law from Oxford University and Harvard University. He is well known in the areas of Intellectual Property and Internet Law and has worked closely with Australian governments on facilitating access to public sector information.

From 1998-2002 he was Head of the School of Law and Justice at Southern Cross University in New South Wales, Australia and from January 2002 – January 2007 was appointed as Head of the School of Law at QUT in Brisbane, Australia.

Brian is currently a specialist Research Professor in Intellectual Property and Innovation at QUT and a Chief Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation. In 2009 Brian was appointed to the Australia Government’s Government 2.0 Taskforce and to the Advisory Council on Intellectual Property (ACIP).

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