3. Keynotes
The Internet, Science, and Transformations of Knowledge
Ralph Schröder, Oxford Internet Institute, UK
Who opens governments? The co-existence (or competition) of top down
versus bottom up strategies
Anke Domscheit-Berg, OpenGov.me, DE
Evolving Technologies and the Human Dimension of Attempts to Increase
Civic Competence
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan, US
4. Workshops
Open Access and Preservation in eGovernment
Ross King
Open Linked Government Data for Citizen Engagement
Anneke Zuiderwijk, Marijn Janssen, Keith Jeffery,
Yannis Charalabidis
Open Government Data
Johann Höchtl, Carl-Markus Piswanger
FUPOL - E-Policy Making
Peter Sonntagbauer
5. Tracks
Track: E-participation
Julia Glidden (21c Consultancy, UK)
Francesco Molinari (Parterre project, I)
Norbert Kersting (Stellenboch Universtity, ZA)
Track: Open Data & Open Access
Johann Höchtl (Danube University Krems, AT)
Jörn von Lucke (Zeppelin University, DE)
Track: Government 2.0
Reinhard Riedl (University of Zurich, CH)
Philipp Müller (University of Salzburg, Business School, AT)
Track: Bottom-Up Movements
Axel Bruns (ARC Centre for Creative Industries and Innovation, AU)
Elin Wihlborg (Linkoping University, SE)
Track: E-Politics and E-Campaigning
Ralf Lindner (Fraunhofer ISI, DE)
Andy Williamson (Hansard Society, UK)
Track: Social Media and Networks for Public Administration
Sylvia Archmann (EIPA, NL)
Peter Mambrey (Universität Duisburg-Essen, DE)
Rebecca Schild (University of Toronto at Scarborough, CA)
10. PC & Co-Chair meeting
Today
17:45 18:30 PC & Co-Chair Meeting
If you want to support CeDEM13,
come to the meeting:
We are open for new ideas &
tracks ;-)
Submissions 52 Accepted peer-reviewd paper published: 23 Acceptance rate ca. 44 % 384 Pages + eBook + eJournal Mehr als 100 Anmeldungen (teilnehmer) 19,25 Stunden Vorträge und Workshops Anmeldungen aus 35 Ländern
Traditional reserach publisher, like Spinger and Co, do not offer
4 years
Thank to our sponsors: The Austrian Federal Computing Centre, they are our most loyal partner - without their generous contribution this conference couldn’t take place. AIT
Advice
Managing Director and also Editor of the conference proceedings
The Internet, Science, and Transformations of Knowledge
It`s a great honour to introduce Ralph Schröder from the University of Oxford. He is Programme Director, Director of Research at the Oxford Internet Institute – the worldwide leading Institution in Internet Research. He is currently working on shared virtual environments and on the social implications of e-science. More than 100 peer reviewed papers, with high citation impact (h-Index: 17, Times cited: 1309 ) When I read that he completed his PhD about the Max Weber. Most of you know Max Weber, he is a famous German sociologist, philosopher and political economist. And our public administration is based on Max Weber concepts, to the present.. Today we have the tension between the perfectly hierarchical organized Max Weber organizations and the new bottom up many 2 many networked based organizations forms. And one of our Guest Professors, Arthur Winter, asked which kind of concepts would Max Weber design for public administration today? And this leads me to the Keynote issue. When we invited Ralph Schröder, he said thanks but where is the link to edemocracy. Technology transforms all sectors and we can learn from the experiences. So he will talk about eResearch and how eresearch has transformed knowledge. The aim of this talk will be to analyse the emergence and consequences of e-Research and related changes - for scholarship, and for how we understand the world around us. Ralph thanks for coming – it‘s your floor.