1. Commons for Europe
Kollaborative Web-Projekte für öffentliche Stellen
Lena-Sophie Müller | Fraunhofer FOKUS | BODDy | 24. Juni 2013
2. Der Hintergrund
Vergleichbare Anforderungen in
europäischen Städten
•schrumpfende Budgets
•zunehmende Anforderungen an
Dienstleistungen von Bürgern
•Notwendigkeit, sich auf dem Weg
zu „Smart Cities“ neu zu erfinden
•Vergleichbare Aufgaben
Das Internet bietet neue
Möglichkeiten
•Zusammenarbeit zu koordinieren
•Wissen gemeinsam zu generieren
•Sourcecode gemeinsam zu nutzen
Bild: Flickr / terrydu - CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
3. Der Hintergrund
Vergleichbare Anforderungen in
europäischen Städten
Das Internet bietet neue
Möglichkeiten
Städten fehlt es oft an Ressourcen und Mechanismen, um
vollen Nutzen aus diesem Potential zu schöpfen.
Zielt als Vermittler zwischen Bürgern und Städten darauf an,
diese Lücke schließen zu helfen.
Bild: Flickr / terrydu - CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
4. Wie funktioniert es in der Praxis?
Software-
entwickler
Verwaltungs-
Fachwissen
Entwicklungs-
kompetenz
Teilnahmeaufrufe und
Erfahrungsaustausch
Problem-
identifikation
Bild: Flickr / terrydu - CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
5. Wie funktioniert es in der Praxis?
Software-
entwickler
Verwaltungs-
Fachwissen
Software-
lösungen
Entwicklungs-
kompetenz
Teilnahmeaufrufe und
Erfahrungsaustausch
Problem-
identifikation
Weitere Kommunen
Open Source
Bild: Flickr / terrydu - CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
Cities face a scenario characterized by shrinking budgets, increasing demands of services from their citizens and the need to reinvent themselves in their quest to become Smart Cities. Simultaneously, the Internet brought new opportunities to orchestrate collaboration, fostering the creation of a large base of commons in code, user generated contents and even telecom infrastructures with the emergence of Bottom-up-Broadband networks. Cities have many times lacked the resources and mechanisms to take full advantage of this wealth. However, organizations like Code for America are showing how they can effectively and successfully intermediate between citizens and cities and help in closing this gap. Commons4EU aims to build on the shoulders of this experience with an initial core team of 7 cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Manchester, Rome and UK-NESTA (UK cities involved in the project through NESTA) working together in 2 main areas:
Cities face a scenario characterized by shrinking budgets, increasing demands of services from their citizens and the need to reinvent themselves in their quest to become Smart Cities. Simultaneously, the Internet brought new opportunities to orchestrate collaboration, fostering the creation of a large base of commons in code, user generated contents and even telecom infrastructures with the emergence of Bottom-up-Broadband networks. Cities have many times lacked the resources and mechanisms to take full advantage of this wealth. However, organizations like Code for America are showing how they can effectively and successfully intermediate between citizens and cities and help in closing this gap. Commons4EU aims to build on the shoulders of this experience with an initial core team of 7 cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Manchester, Rome and UK-NESTA (UK cities involved in the project through NESTA) working together in 2 main areas:
Cities face a scenario characterized by shrinking budgets, increasing demands of services from their citizens and the need to reinvent themselves in their quest to become Smart Cities. Simultaneously, the Internet brought new opportunities to orchestrate collaboration, fostering the creation of a large base of commons in code, user generated contents and even telecom infrastructures with the emergence of Bottom-up-Broadband networks. Cities have many times lacked the resources and mechanisms to take full advantage of this wealth. However, organizations like Code for America are showing how they can effectively and successfully intermediate between citizens and cities and help in closing this gap. Commons4EU aims to build on the shoulders of this experience with an initial core team of 7 cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Manchester, Rome and UK-NESTA (UK cities involved in the project through NESTA) working together in 2 main areas:
Cities face a scenario characterized by shrinking budgets, increasing demands of services from their citizens and the need to reinvent themselves in their quest to become Smart Cities. Simultaneously, the Internet brought new opportunities to orchestrate collaboration, fostering the creation of a large base of commons in code, user generated contents and even telecom infrastructures with the emergence of Bottom-up-Broadband networks. Cities have many times lacked the resources and mechanisms to take full advantage of this wealth. However, organizations like Code for America are showing how they can effectively and successfully intermediate between citizens and cities and help in closing this gap. Commons4EU aims to build on the shoulders of this experience with an initial core team of 7 cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Manchester, Rome and UK-NESTA (UK cities involved in the project through NESTA) working together in 2 main areas: