YouScotland.com is not a political party, it is a citizens’ movement aimed at influencing the political process.
With elections pending to Holyrood and at Council level on Thursday, May 3rd, electoral politics will inevitably dominate the next few weeks. But there will be another 204 weeks before there are new elections to these bodies. It is then we believe youscotland.com will come into its own, irrespective of the results on 3rd May – an online citizen’s voice that will hold the politicians we elect on 3rd May to account.
But we do believe we can have a here and now influence by informing and exposing where parties, politicians, the media and others are clearly “at it”, and we will do so without fear or favour. We are in nobody’s pocket, though we hope we are on the right side.
| Posts in category 'Europe' |
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5 April 2007
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2 April 2007
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21 March 2007
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19 March 2007
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19 March 2007
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10 March 2007
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10 March 2007
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8 March 2007
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2 March 2007
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11 February 2007
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Technology transforming relationship between the elected and the electorate of Europe [eGov monitor]
1 February 2007
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24 January 2007
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26 November 2006
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25 November 2006
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19 November 2006
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8 November 2006
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By almost every measure, public confidence and trust in politicians and political institutions is slipping. |
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6 November 2006
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PASC – the UK Public Administration Select Committee – launches a new inquiry into the role that “customers” or “users” should have in shaping or even helping to provide public services. |
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2 November 2006
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2 November 2006
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Next week is the 10th anniversary of the birth of e-government in the UK. Michael Cross of The Guardian looks at how it came to be, and asks what progress – if any – has been made.
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30 October 2006
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Local and central government looking to offer online services to citizens and businesses will soon be able to access, at no cost, a solution accelerator application offered by Microsoft, and partners PC-WARE AG and Spenta Consulting, through the European Regional Information Society Association (eris@). |
Putting People First
Experientia's daily insights on experience design, user experience and innovationIota Partners is a new Chicago-based venture of Rick Robinson and John
According to a new driving study, conducted by Professor SeungJun Kim
Short report on the first European EPIC meeting by Anna Wojnarowska, UX
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Demos, the UK think tank for everyday democracy, has published a collection of essays by leading thinkers and practitioners that assesses how far the UK has already come towards a more collaborative style of government and sets out international case studies of some of the most interesting initiatives to date. It concludes by asking how future governments can use collaboration as a key design principle for transforming the UK’s public services.
Children will be able to find out about Government, public services and the world around them in a fresh, fun and informative way through a new website launched today.
Involve (an independent UK organisation focused on the practicalities of giving more power to ordinary people) has produced an “Evaluation Guide – Making a Difference: A guide to evaluating public participation in central government”, as a
The Council of Europe symposium “e-democracy: new opportunities for enhancing civic participation”, will take place at the Palais de l’Europe, Strasbourg (France) from 23 to 24 April 2007.
Online petitions like the 1.8m-strong one against road pricing risk undermining representative democracy, a committee of senior MPs warned today.
An increasing amount of municipalities, public/non-profit institutions and communities around the world seem to be discovering and adopting ‘participatory budgeting‘, ‘a process of democratic deliberation and decision-making, in which ordinary city residents decide how to allocate part of a municipal or public budget.’ (
Recently the Downing Street website crashes under the weight of e-mails from angry voters.
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Europe has celebrated 50 years of peace and political progression, but the next 50 will see massive changes in the relationship between the electorate and politicians thanks to technology.
In the age of ubiquitous participatory culture – from the explosion in user generated media to the very way we do business, art, collaboration and even education – the world of politics often feels left behind, writes 
Tony Blair’s outgoing chief strategy adviser fears the internet could be fuelling a “crisis” in the relationship between politicians and voters, writes Brian Wheeler on BBC News Online.
An online ideas store to help cultural websites stand out from the crowd has been launched by Culture Online, part of the UK Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), reports the eGov Monitor.