ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Jobs
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


Online business Toolkit

Government accused of transferring red tape to the Net

Jane Wakefield ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 15 Mar 2001 17:34 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

A damning report published on Thursday accuses the government of being out of touch with citizens in its ambitious online plans.

Independent thinktank Demos accuses the government of merely transferring offline red tape on to the Net and says the government should produce an Internet Bill of Rights outlining citizens' rights and responsibilities in the digital age. The report claims the government is more interested in meeting its 2005 target to have all government services online, than about the quality of those services. Targets for e-government should be about providing genuine improvements in the delivery of services rather than just automating existing ones, the report recommends

The recommendations are listed in a report -- Transformation, not Automation -- a critique of the government's online strategy in which report author Daniel Stedman-Jones warns that e-government is in danger of strangling itself in red tape. "E-government has the potential to transform our democratic and political institutions," he says. "The practices underway today are leading the UK towards a 'virtual Whitehall' with many of the bureaucratic problems that e-government should eliminate."

The government needs a more coherent strategy that links government departments, says the report. "Joined-up government is still an aspiration rather than a reality," says director of Demos Tom Bentley. "The government should have a new ambition -- a fundamental, institutional transformation. E-government is not just about replicating routines online, it is about a new role between citizen and state."

Coenraad van der Poel, chief operating officer at EzGov, a software company which builds e-government services, believes the government has taken its lead too much from industry. "The government's focus on e-commerce has meant that users of online services are treated as consumers rather than citizens. E-government must start to be seen as an essential part of the modernisation of government -- not just as an optional extra."

Hitting back at critics, e-minister Patricia Hewitt claims that e-government is still at an early stage. "We are taking existing services and making them more accessible," she explains. "The next stage which we are just embarking on is to make e-enablement part of a much larger project to modernise government."

Other recommendations in the report were to make the e-minister a cabinet post to provide better leadership, to create a public sector venture capital fund to encourage an entrepreneurial approach to e-government and develop a comprehensive plan to ensure e-government projects are integrated.

Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the ZDNet News forum.

Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read what others have said.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Did you find this article useful?
41 out of 68 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:











Sentry Posts Blog

Nasa and the virus

Yesterday the BBC ran a story about a computer virus making it into orbit, which I read with incredulity. OK, it's a nice silly season story on the surface, but what really got me was... More

3 comments

Customer data found on eBay server hig...

The recent news about customer details being retrieved from a server sold on eBay is yet another story about the sorry state of information security in the electronic age (see: http://news.zdnet.co.uk/...m).... More

Post a comment

Does it matter if you are an aardvark...

In spam terms, apparently it does. According to Cambridge University security expert Richard Clayton, if your email address is aardvark at animal.net, you are more likely to receive... More

5 comments