Published on NCUSCR (http://www.ncuscr.org)
Best Practices in E-Government in Mainland China, Taiwan, and American Cities

  • Program Dates to China and Taiwan: June 29-July 11, 2007; to the U.S.: March 8-20, 2008
  • Goal: Fostering dialogue and cooperation on cutting edge issues
  • Type: Study Tour, Training Workshop
  • Category: Governance & Civil Society
  • Keywords: Internet, E-governance
  • Places Visited: Washington DC, Tampa, Taichung TAIWAN, Seattle, Hangzhou ZHEJIANG, Beijing
  • Program Funder(s): U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
  • Participants included 4 American specialists, 8 Chinese administration officials

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Special headline and abstract for homepage content.

descriptive_homepage_headline: 
Mainland Chinese, Taiwanese and U.S. specialists share best e-governance practices
homepage_abstract: 

Experts discuss (and demonstrate) best practices of municipal e-governance systems currently in use in cities across the globe.

At a glance info
Date: 
Program Dates to China and Taiwan: June 29-July 11, 2007; to the U.S.: March 8-20, 2008
Event Date: 
March 19, 2008
at_a_glance: 

Participants included 4 American specialists, 8 Chinese administration officials

Despite differences in political traditions and practices, municipal government officials in the United States, mainland China and Taiwan share interests in delivering services to citizens, promoting economic development and managing government resources. Many have taken advantage of the Internet’s capacity for fast, inexpensive communication and introduced innovative municipal websites. These e-government initiatives, in turn, have dramatically changed the way local governments interact with residents and opened new channels for promoting civic engagement, transparency and government accountability.

With funding from the U.S. State Department, the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations implemented an exchange project that provides a forum for representatives of municipal governments to share experience in using e-government to communicate with citizens and coordinate delivery of services.

The project is taking place in three stages: In the first stage, completed in July 2007, a delegation of four American specialists participated in workshops in Beijing, Hangzhou and Taichung with their professional counterparts. The second stage, completed in March 2008, brought four mainland Chinese and four Taiwan information officers and specialists to Washington, D.C., Tampa, and Seattle for a study tour that gave the participants a closer look at e-government practices in American cities, particularly e-government’s potential for provision of social services and promotion of economic development. The third stage of the project will share the lessons learned with a wider audience, through the preparation and dissemination of an article co-authored by a representative from each of the three jurisdictions.

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Photo Gallery [2]

Trip to mainland China and Taiwan

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Source URL: http://www.ncuscr.org/programs/best-practices-e-government-mainland-china-taiwan-and-american-cities

Links:
[1] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/egovdeltochina.jpg
[2] http://www.ncuscr.org/programs/best-practices-e-government-mainland-china-taiwan-and-american-cities#
[3] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/DSC00066.jpg
[4] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/DSCN2539.jpg
[5] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1122.jpg
[6] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/DSCN2657.jpg
[7] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1135.jpg
[8] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1149.jpg
[9] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1169.jpg
[10] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1328.jpg
[11] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_1333.jpg
[12] http://www.ncuscr.org/files/IMG_2489.jpg