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Working Papers Vol 1: Foundations of the Digital State
Barnes and Noble
Working Papers Vol 1: Foundations of the Digital State
Current price: $40.00


Barnes and Noble
Working Papers Vol 1: Foundations of the Digital State
Current price: $40.00
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This is the first of two volumes of Working Papers that support
The Foundations of the Digital State
is an independent report written for the Scottish Government. It was a practioner-led, holistic review of how the state creates services built on digital foundations. The review covered the entire political cycle: from think-tanks and manifestos, through policy development, programmes of proposed legislation, bills and bill packs, parliamentary process and onto the traditional disciplines of design, technology, data, delivery and ending in-service management. It identified structural and institutional lacunae in state structures arising from the transition from an analogue to digital world and makes a series of recommendations to address them. The recommendations are underpinned with proposed legislation. The issues are:
The government needs a single organisation with the mechanism to make decisions about
how
digital systems should work, and parliament needs a single structure to oversee those decisions.
Decisions about
what
digital systems should do are made sub-optimally by parliament using ad-hoc repurposed mechanisms.
The state lacks a research capability for digital systems.
The recommendations fall into 3 themes to address the points:
unitary specification of services and systems
better iteration in service development
developing a research capability
The first puts infrastructure and joined-up government on a par with the delivery of siloed solutions. The second address speed and course correction, bringing public sector practices in line with major tech companies. The third prepares the state to use the new capabilities built by the first two.
About the author
Gordon Guthrie has a unique blend of experience, combinging a lifetime career on the internet as a software engineer for some of the UK and the worlds biggest tech companies, as well as front line political and policy experience.
The Foundations of the Digital State
is an independent report written for the Scottish Government. It was a practioner-led, holistic review of how the state creates services built on digital foundations. The review covered the entire political cycle: from think-tanks and manifestos, through policy development, programmes of proposed legislation, bills and bill packs, parliamentary process and onto the traditional disciplines of design, technology, data, delivery and ending in-service management. It identified structural and institutional lacunae in state structures arising from the transition from an analogue to digital world and makes a series of recommendations to address them. The recommendations are underpinned with proposed legislation. The issues are:
The government needs a single organisation with the mechanism to make decisions about
how
digital systems should work, and parliament needs a single structure to oversee those decisions.
Decisions about
what
digital systems should do are made sub-optimally by parliament using ad-hoc repurposed mechanisms.
The state lacks a research capability for digital systems.
The recommendations fall into 3 themes to address the points:
unitary specification of services and systems
better iteration in service development
developing a research capability
The first puts infrastructure and joined-up government on a par with the delivery of siloed solutions. The second address speed and course correction, bringing public sector practices in line with major tech companies. The third prepares the state to use the new capabilities built by the first two.
About the author
Gordon Guthrie has a unique blend of experience, combinging a lifetime career on the internet as a software engineer for some of the UK and the worlds biggest tech companies, as well as front line political and policy experience.