opendata-banner.jpg
Conference

Can “Open Data” Improve Democratic Governance?

Thursday, September 12, 2013
8:30 am - 6:00 pm
Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall, UC Berkeley

Open data, social media, geographic information systems, wireless communications, and mobile devices are transforming the relationship between government institutions at all levels and the constituents they represent. The open data movement, fueled by technical innovations, offers opportunities to increase accountability and citizen participation through greater transparency and by generating more effective, crowd-sourced solutions to public problems. At the same time, questions of access and inclusion must also be addressed. Which groups are enabled to participate by these tools and whose voices are omitted? This one-day conference explores the impact of open data on public policy and democratic governance in the digital age.

Keynote Addresses:

Gavin Newsom, California Lt. Governor
Stanley S. Litow, President, IBM International Foundation

Tickets required:

Faculty/Staff/Student: $20; Non-Profit: $50; Corporate: $70
Reserve tickets now.

See the conference website for more information.

Sponsored by the CITRIS Data & Democracy Initiative and Institute of Governmental Studies. Co-sponsored by the School of Information.

Last updated: March 26, 2015