[open-government] Technology for Fiscal Transparency - WhereNext?

Pedro Markun pedro at esfera.mobi
Fri Mar 23 13:50:26 UTC 2012


Hey Hille,

sure thing! Let's meet, share and party.

I was told there's even a Karaoke Hacker session beeing planed somewhere >:)

[]'s
Pedro Markun

2012/3/23 Hille Hinsberg <hille.hinsberg at praxis.ee>

> Lucy, ****
>
> thanks for the  report info! ****
>
> ** **
>
> Pedro, I´d like to meet the Transparency Hackers  at the OGP meeting, ****
>
> share ideas on budget transparency, ****
>
>  Estonian site is http://www.meieraha.eu/?lang=en&page=main****
>
> ** **
>
> ** **
>
> See you in Brasilia, ****
>
> Hille Hinsberg, ****
>
> Praxis Policy Center, Estonia****
>
> ** **
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* open-government-bounces at lists.okfn.org [mailto:
> open-government-bounces at lists.okfn.org] *On Behalf Of *Chris Taggart
> *Sent:* Thursday, March 22, 2012 3:31 PM
> *To:* Pedro Markun
> *Cc:* open-economics at lists.okfn.org; openspending; Open Government WG List
>
> *Subject:* Re: [open-government] Technology for Fiscal Transparency -
> WhereNext?****
>
> ** **
>
> Pedro****
>
> ** **
>
> That sounds great. I'm going to OGP (am on one of the panels), and that
> sort of project was one of the reasons for setting up OpenCorporates
> (OpenSpending and OpenlyLocal both use the OpenCorporates reconciliation
> API to match names of government suppliers to companies). We haven't yet
> got Brazilian companies in OpenCorporates, but are working on it.****
>
> ** **
>
> Chris****
>
>
> --
> -------------------------------------------------------
> OpenCorporates :: The Open Database of the Corporate World
> http://opencorporates.com
> OpenlyLocal :: Making Local Government More Transparent
> http://openlylocal.com
> Blog: http://countculture.wordpress.com
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/CountCulture****
>
> ** **
>
> On 22 March 2012 13:19, Pedro Markun <pedro at esfera.mobi> wrote:****
>
> Awesome.
>
> I'll take a look into it :)
>
> In Transparency Hackers we didn't (or at least I didn't) focus much energy
> on fiscal transparency (for a number of reasons, but mostly because that's
> the area in wich Brazil does best already).
>
> But since the Hacker Bus we just started an project/idea around it that
> might be interesting for you. We've started producing some 'street posters'
> (those really cheap ones you glue with water and floor? you have those?)
> that shows how much money a specific company profited from their local
> government in the past few months (with graphs and charts) - the idea is to
> create an website that allows people to print those on demand and help
> spread transparency all over the country.
>
> Still really early in the game. We might as well do that in Brasilia
> during the OGP meeting.
>
> []'s
> Pedro Markun
> ps: Anyone going to the OGP meeting? The Transparency Hackers are renting
> a big house with barbecue and stuff for people to sleep and hack. If anyone
> is looking for a place to stay, drop me an email.****
>
> ** **
>
> On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 2:08 PM, Lucy Chambers <lucy.chambers at okfn.org>
> wrote:****
>
> Dear Lists (apologies for the cross-post),
>
> Over the last month, my colleague Velichka and I have been working on
> a report entitled “Technology for Transparent and Accountable Public
> Finance" for the GIFT initiative ready for next month's OGP meeting.
>
> We are hoping to identify the most promising projects around the world
> that are using technology (web, mobile or otherwise) to further aims
> of fiscal transparency. Of particular interest are projects that aim
> to:
>
> * Publish more or better data related to fiscal processes (aid,
> revenues, budgets, audits, etc. — see below),
> * Help understand this data through the creation of better
> visualisation and data analysis tools,
> * Educate citizens about fiscal processes, and assist civil society
> organisations promoting accountable governance,
> * Facilitate direct participation in fiscal matters through
> participatory budgeting, citizen auditing and the like,
> * Provide policymakers with complete and reliable data relevant to
> their work, enabling them to make better decisions.
>
> More details on the report can be found in this post:
>
> http://blog.okfn.org/2012/03/21/technology-for-fiscal-transparency-where-next/
>
> We wanted to ask the wisdom of the list if there are any projects
> which we should consider for inclusion in the report or for their
> observations on the above.
>
> We have also produced a form which gives more details on the areas we
> area focussing on - and we would encourage people to fill out with
> details of projects which should be included in the report
> http://bit.ly/GCX1Cw
>
> Many thanks for your help and I look forward to hearing from you,
>
> All the best,
>
> Lucy
>
>
> --
> Lucy Chambers
> Community Coordinator,
> OpenSpending & Data Journalism
> Open Knowledge Foundation
> Skype: lucyfediachambers
> Twitter: @lucyfedia
>
> _______________________________________________
>
> ****
>
>
>
> ****
>
> ** **
>
> -- ****
>
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