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2 | Schedule | Room | Title | Organizer(s) | Translations | Theme | Format | Session Description | Speakers |
3 | Wednesday, May 29, 18:00 - 20:00 | ||||||||
4 | Wednesday May 29 18:00 - 20:00 | Canada Hall | Opening Ceremony | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | Opening ceremony of OGP Global Summit 2019 | MASTER OF CEREMONY Liz Plank, Senior Producer & Political Correspondent, Vox, Canada MODERATORS 1. Mark Barrenechea, Chief Executive Officer, OpenText, Canada 2. Joyce Murray, Minister of Digital Government & President of the Treasury Board, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister, Canada 2. Sanjay Pradhan, Chief Executive Officer, Open Government Partnership, India 3. Nathaniel Heller, Civil Society Co-Chair of OGP Steering Committee & Executive Vice President, Results for Development, United States 4. Rob Davidson, Civil Society Co-Chair of Canada OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forum & Founder, Open Data Institute Ottawa, Canada 5. Claudette Comanda, Indigenous Leader of the Algonquin Community, Canada 6. Patrick Gaspard, President, Open Society Foundations, United States 7. Tim Berners-Lee, Inventor of the Web & Founder, World Wide Web Foundation, United Kingdom 8. John Penrose, Minister of State for Northern Ireland, United Kingdom 9. Sashee de Mel, Senior Program Manager, Transparency International Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka |
5 | Thursday, May 30, 09:00 - 10:20 | ||||||||
6 | Thursday May 30 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Threats to Democracy | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Participation | Panel | Threats to democracy are continuously evolving, and need a coordinated response from the open government community. Governments and citizens are increasingly aware of an array of new threats to democracy, including disinformation campaigns online, digitally propelled polarization, attacks on civic space and transnational flows of dark money into media and politics. As OGP seeks to be a positive global movement for openness and democracy, it must confront these trends and become a stronger collective coalition against these threats. | MODERATOR Rakesh Rajani, OGP Envoy & Vice President, Co-Impact, Tanzania SPEAKERS 1. Renata Ávila, Director, Ciudadano Inteligente, Guatemala 2. Ben Scott, Director of Policy and Advocacy, Luminate, United States 3. Halla Tómasdóttir, Chief Executive Officer, The B Team, Iceland 4. Christophe Deloire, Secretary-General, Reporters Sans Frontière, France 5. Yama Yari, Minister of Transportation, Afghanistan 6. Karina Gould, Minister of Democratic Institutions, Canada |
7 | Thursday, May 30, 10:30 - 11:50 | ||||||||
8 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | Parliaments as Partners for Ambitious Open Government Reforms | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. ParlAmericas | English French Spanish | Participation | Panel | Parliamentarians want to engage you: as an individual, a representative of civil society, the private sector, academia, government, media or otherwise, in a dialogue to identify new ways in which it can support open government reforms across various thematic sectors. Parliaments can be formidable champions of OGP principles and values and pivotal partners in advancing the open government agenda. More specifically, parliamentarians can (1) contribute to setting the national agenda and lend political weight to openness initiatives, (2) guarantee the sustainability of these efforts across electoral cycles by building multi-partisan support, (3) oversee their government’s openness commitments and hold them accountable, (4) develop, review and adopt relevant legislation and (5) lead by example, by opening the institution of parliament, among others. This session will provide an opportunity to discuss parliament’s role in advancing such reforms nationally with open government stakeholders. It will take place in the form of a panel discussion with parliamentarians who have been leading open parliament initiatives in their respective countries, and various civil society representatives who will take turns to participate in the discussion through a rotating “hot” seat. | MODERATOR Randy Boissonnault, Member of Parliament & Vice-Chair of the Canadian Section, ParlAmericas, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Moses Kipkemboi Cheboi, Deputy Speaker of National Assembly, Kenya 2. Aida Kasymalieva, Deputy Speaker of Supreme Council, Kyrgyz Republic 3. Alfonso De Urresti, Deputy Speaker of Senate, Chile 4. Noel Alonso Murray, Executive Director, Fundacion Directorio Legislativo, Argentina 5. Open Seat for Audience Intervention |
9 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | Actions for a More Inclusive Open Government Agenda in Asia-Pacific | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Open | Fishbowl | This session will focus on how OGP countries in the region can work towards improving participation and inclusion in their OGP processes. It will focus on the following questions: 1. What has been done to foster inclusion and broad-based participation in OGP co-creation processes till date, and what practical actions can countries take to improve? 2. How can inclusion be mainstreamed into open government commitments? What are the challenges faced in doing so? 3. What themes should the next round of OGP action plans from the region address, to ensure that the proposed reforms meet the needs of the most disadvantaged groups in society? | MODERATOR Ivy Ong, Program Officer for Asia-Pacific, Open Government Partnership, Philippines KEYNOTE Sarwar Danesh, Second Vice President, Afghanistan SPEAKERS 1. Byambasuren Urgamal, Deputy Head of Cabinet Secretariat, Mongolia 2. Ulugbek Kalenderov, Deputy Minister of Justice, Kyrgyz Republic 3. Chandima Wickramasinghe, Assistant Secretary to the President, Sri Lanka 4. Bart Edes, Representative for North America, Asian Development Bank, Australia 5. Dagia Aka, Youth Integrity Program Coordinator, Transparency International Papua New Guinea, Papua New Guiena 6. Shyamala Gomez, Executive Director, Centre for Equality and Justice, Sri Lanka 7. Marlon Manuel, Senior Advisor to the Global Legal Empowerment Network, Namati, Philippines 8. Maryati Abdullah, OGP Envoy & Director, Publish What You Pay Indonesia, Indonesia |
10 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | Open Government: A Means to What End? | 1. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 2. Statistics Canada | English French | Impact | Panel | The aim of open government reforms is to strengthen governments’ transparency, accountability, integrity, and to promote stakeholder participation in policy making and service delivery. The hypothesis is that doing so leads to better quality policies and services, to a more effective administration, and helps increase citizens’ trust in government. Yet, data to prove this presumption remains scarce. Moreover, governments are looking for new approaches to leverage data to create more value by the open government community. This session will explore the governance of open government, i.e. the way in which governments are organising themselves to design and implement open government related reforms, how these reforms are steered to maximise their effect such as increasing citizens’ trust. Open government leaders from countries such as Canada, New Zealand and Spain will share their respective approaches to linking evidence with policy design and evaluation. The panel will also explore government’s collaboration with civil society and private sector in evaluating the outcomes of openness reforms and learning from the results. | MODERATOR Marcos Bonturi, Director of Public Governance, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Italy SPEAKERS 1. Robert McLellan, Chief Technology Officer, Statistics Canada, Canada 2. Catherine Williams, Deputy Commissioner, State Services Commissioner, New Zealand 3. María Pía Junquera Temprano, Director General of Public Governance, Ministerio de Política Territorial y Función Pública, Spain 4. Kathrin Frauscher, Deputy Executive Director, Open Contracting Partnership, Austria |
11 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | Three Methodologies to Assess the Implementation of SDG Indicator 16.10.2 | 1. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) 2. Centre for Law and Democracy (CLD) | English French | Impact | Workshop | This will be a workshop involving short presentations from UNESCO, CLD, an Information Commissioner from Kenya and an expert from Ukraine on their experiences in applying different methodologies for assessing implementation of right to information (RTI) laws. The presenters will then lead the participants in groups to discuss how they could apply one or another of these in their own countries, who should be involved and how they could promote the results following the application of the methodology. The three methodologies are as follows: 1. FOIAnet Methodology: http://foiadvocates.net/?page_id=11036 2. UNESCO Methodology: https://en.unesco.org/news/unesco-pilots-global-data-collection-access-information 3. CLD-GIZ Methodology: https://www.law-democracy.org/live/launch-of-the-right-to-information-implementation-methodology | MODERATOR Toby Mendel, Executive Director, Centre for Law and Democracy, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Lucy Kamunye Ndung'u, Access to Information Commissioner, Kenya 2. Marius Lukosiunas, Program Specialist for Freedom of Expression and Media Development, United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, Lithuania 3. Tetyana Oleksiyuk, Expert on Access to Information, United Nations Development Programme Ukraine, Ukraine |
12 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | Open Government in the Digital Age: Restoring the Strength of Democratic States in a New Era | German Federal Chancellery | English French | Open | Fishbowl | We want to discuss how the strength of open democratic government can be pushed in terms of outcome and efficiency (e.g. E-Government and open data projects), in terms of fairness and inclusion, but also as regarding economic success in the digital age. Outcomes: Igniting the insight and enthusiasm for digitization not just as one of the major challenges, but one of the major opportunities for open democratic governments. The session could inspire a roadmap for how to strengthen open democratic rule of law states in the digital age. The participants should discuss experiences and examples how digitization has helped their open democratic government to succeed in various aspects, such as: 1. Highlighting the opportunities of the digital age for open, democratic and rule of law governments 2. Refuting the assumption that in the digital age, autocratic states are superior to democracies with their more complex decision processes The fishbowl format will allow us to take a 360 degree view on these matters. | MODERATOR Renata Ávila, Director, Ciudadano Inteligente, Guatemala SPEAKERS 1. Dorothee Bär, State Minister for Digitization, Germany 2. Navdeep Bains, Minister of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development, Canada 3. Henri Verdier, Ambassador for Digital Affairs, France 4. Ben Scott, Director of Policy and Advocacy, Luminate, United States 5. Dorothy Gordon, Chair of Information for All Programme, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Ghana |
13 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | The Story of Open: New Tools for Impactful Open Government Journalism | Reboot | English French | Impact | Knowledge Café | It’s not easy to tell the story of how open government initiatives impact citizens, or to parse newly transparent data into resonant narratives. As open government practitioners increasingly work to strengthen transparency and accountability, mediamakers play a critical role in building a more responsive and effective movement. And a growing number of CSOs, research organizations, and open government advocates are finding ways to help journalists do just that. This action-oriented session will focus on new tools and research models specifically designed to support open government advocates engage journalists and mediamakers to advance their vision. After several hands-on demonstrations, participants will bring their own challenges and design ways to adapt the methods shared to their own research and advocacy process. Each participant, regardless of their experience working with media, will leave the session with concrete ideas on when, how, why to engage journalists and mediamakers, and what our collective work stands to gain from doing so. | FACILITATORS 1. Yop Rwang Pam, Program Associate, Reboot, Nigeria 2. Corey Chao, Strategic Designer, Reboot, United States 3. John Nelvin Lucero, Producer, Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, Philippines 4. Juan Pablo Marin Diaz, Director, Datasketch - Random Monkey, Argentina |
14 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | OGP en America Latina: El Desafío de Incluir Todas Las Voces | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Panel | Most countries in Latin-america are currently in their third or fourth action plan cycle, but there are also new participants, as Ecuador, and new actors, such as the legislative and the judiciary branches. What have we learned from the past processes and how can we improve the delivery of action plans? In this session, we will try to answer the following questions: 1. How have the voices in the process changed through the action plans? What are you doing to incorporate new actors? 2. How can you address the needs of vulnerable groups? 3. How can we improve the interaction between branches? 4. As you move into your new (third / fourth) action plans, what are the new themes or issues to be challenged? How do you use your previous work to push for more ambition? | MODERATOR Álvaro Ramírez-Alujas, Investigator, Grupo de Investigación en Gobierno, Administración y Políticas Públicas, Chile SPEAKERS 1. Nancy Marín Espinoza, Minister of Communications, Costa Rica 2. José Agusto Briones, General Secretary, President's Office, Ecuador 3. Claudio Alvarado, Vice Minister of the Secretary General of the Presidency, Chile 4. María Barón, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Global Executive Director, Fundacion Directorio Legislativo, Argentina 5. Fernando Grillo Rubiano, Director, Administrative Department of the Public Function, Colombia 6. Mónica Villegas, Senior Project Manager, Fundación Corona, Colombia |
15 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | Telling Our Story: How We Explain Open Government | 1. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | English French | Impact | Panel | How can stories influence policy and advance the open government agenda? At the Summit, we will hear from OGP, OECD, and professional storytellers about the power and value of stories to achieve strategic organizational goals and inspire, influence, and effectively communicate the many accomplishments and challenges the open government community faces. | MODERATOR Stephanie Bluma, Chief Communications Officer, Open Government Partnership, United States SPEAKERS 1. Kelly Ramundo, President, Ramundo Media, United States 2. Karine Badr, Policy Analist, Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development, France 3. Albert Dumont, Elder of the Algonquin Community, Canada |
16 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | Reaching the People: OGP Local Approaches to Empowering Underrepresented Communities | 1. City of Austin 2. City of São Paulo 3. Government of Scotland 4. Basque Country 5. City of Sekondi-Takoradi | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Knowledge Café | OGP Local members will share their strategies for connecting with hard-to-reach residents. 1. Sekondi-Takoradi (Ghana) will speak on working with people with disabilities and HIV. 2. Basque Country (Spain) will speak on working with immigrants (presenting in Spanish). 3. Scotland will speak on working with people and leaders to improve justice and mental health impacts. 4. São Paulo (Brazil) will speak outreach at scale in a community of 12 million residents. 5. Austin (United States) will speak on working with the homeless. | MODERATOR Kelly McBride, Director, Democratic Society, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Patricia Sarenas, Chair of the Board of Trustees, Mindanao Coalition of Development NGO Networks, Philippines 2. Robert Kingham, Courts Operation Manager, City of Austin, United States 3. Iker Goiria, OGP Point of Contact, Basque Country, Spain 4. Henrique Goes, OGP Point of Contact, City of São Paulo, Brazil 5. Doreen Grove, Head of Open Government, Scotland, United Kingdom |
17 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | Blockchain Beyond the Hype: Showcasing Blockchain Applications in the Public Sector | OS City | English French | Impact | Panel | An interactive session that will bring together different perspectives of blockchain in action for the public sector | MODERATOR Jesus Cepeda, Chief Executive Officer, OS City, Mexico SPEAKERS 1. Valerie Thomas, TalentCloud Lead, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada 2. Kausar Samli, SVP Global Services, Learning Machine, United States 3. Eduardo Bohórquez, Director, Transparencia Mexicana, Mexico |
18 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | Releasing Constraints to Participation: Designing Accessible Open Government | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | English French | Participation | Panel | This session aims to explore the many ways access to government can be opened as wide as possible. | MODERATOR Jutta Treviranus, Director of Inclusive Design Research Centre, Ontario College of Art and University, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Victor Pineda, President, World Enabled, United States 2. Janina Sajka, Chair for Accessible Platform Architectures Workgroup W3C Web Accessibility Initiative, Linux Foundation, United States 3. Jonas Deister, Managing Director, Sozialhelden e.V., Germany 4. Cathering Roy, UX/UI Expert, Canada 5. Yazmine Laroche, Deputy Minister for Public Service Accessibility, Canada |
19 | Thursday, May 30, 12:00 - 13:20 | ||||||||
20 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | Innovation in Action: Tales of Public-Private Collaboration | Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada | English French Spanish | Impact | Panel | To keep pace with evolving expectations and rapid technological advances, governments around the world are transforming the way they deliver services and interact with citizens and business. One of the key enablers for this transformation is the innovation ecosystem, which engages small and medium enterprises in solving real world problems, growing jobs and building export capacity. This session will highlight strategic approaches Canada and other countries are taking to foster innovation, including how the innovation ecosystems are driven by public-private sector collaboration. This session will also include a panel of innovative small and medium enterprises who will discuss how they benefit from the innovation ecosystem and the opportunities and challenges that they face. | MODERATOR Mike Tremblay, President and Chief Executive Officer, Invest Ottawa & Bayview Yards, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Navdeep Bains, Minister of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development, Canada 2. Dorothee Bär, State Minister for Digitization, Germany 3. Udi Glass, External Relations and Special Projects Manager, Prime Minister’s Office, Israel 4. Francis Maude, Founder, FMAP Limited, United Kingdom 5. Alida Burke, Co-Founder and Chief Operations Oficer, Growcer, Canada 6. Devashish Paul, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, BluWave.ai, Canada 7. Rory Cain, Founding Partner and Chief Operations Officer, Vivvo, Canada |
21 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | OGP in the Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans: Raising Collective Ambition | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Impact | Fishbowl | Both the countries of the Western Balkan and Eastern Partnership are working on critical political and economic reforms in close partnership with the European Union. Much has been achieved so far, but significant challenges remain. This session will pick up from the conversation that started at the 2018 OGP Global Summit in Tbilisi, focussing on what has transpired since then and how the OGP can be a an effective platform for furthering key governance reforms in these countries. The session will also provide an opportunity for the exchange of lessons learned and success stories that can serve as the motivation and inspiration for future endeavours. Objectives of the session: 1. Inspire leaders to be more ambitious in their open government reforms and align OGP national action plans with broader political and economic reform agendas 2. Connect national and regional agendas and share key cross-regional (within each region and among them) reform opportunities and that can be advanced in multiple countries with the support of EU, OGP and development partners 3. Share inspiring examples with the champions in the room from across the regions (and beyond) | MODERATOR Tinatin Ninua, Deputy Director of Independent Reporting Mechanism, Open Government Partnership, Georgia SPEAKERS 1. Damjan Manchevski, Minister of Information Society and Administration, North Macedonia 2. Eduard Aghajanyan, Chief of Staff to the Prime Minister, Armenia 3. Elena Beradze, Deputy Head of Government Administration, Georgia 4. Anastasiya Kozlovtseva, Head of International Relations, Transparency International Ukraine, Ukraine 5. Giorgi Kldiashvili, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Executive Director, Institute for Development of Freedom of Information, Georgia 6. Bojana Selakovic, Program Director, Civic Initiatives, Serbia 7. Jeff Lovitt, OGP IRM International Experts Panel Member & Chair, New Diplomacy, United Kingdom |
22 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | Engaging Non-Experts in Monitoring Public Spending: Real Experiences and Results | Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency (GIFT) | English French | Participation | Town Hall | This session will discuss how governments can engage non-experts in monitoring public spending. Speakers in this session will share perspectives based on their experiences and also highlight some results from implementation through their engagement with the government. | MODERATOR Juan Pablo Guerrero, Director, Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency, United States SPEAKERS 1. Eunice Sánchez García, Global Winner of the Better Budget Dataquest, Mexico 2. Rosana Gambero, Policy Analyst, Office of Budget and Planning, Uruguay 3. Rosita Dewi, Winner of the Better Budget Dataquest in Indonesia, Indonesia 4. Enrique Zapata, Principle Advisor for Data and New Technologies, Development Bank of Latin America - CAF, Mexico 5. Ismael Araya, Winner of the #DataOnTheStreets Rally of Chile, Chile 6. Gastón Silvera, Winner of the Better Budget Dataquest in Uruguay, Uruguay, 7. Jim Brumby, Director for Global Governance, World Bank, Australia 8. Adrián Martínez, Winner of the #DataOnTheStreets Rally, Transparencia Mexicana, Mexico |
23 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | Empowering Socially Excluded People to Participate in Designing, Implementing, and Monitoring Policies | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (EU FRA) | English French | Inclusion | Workshop | The objective of this session is to share good practice examples of how socially/politically excluded and/or marginalized people, which can cover those with disabilities or those belonging to marginalized ethnic groups, age etc., can be empowered to take an active part in the design, implementation and monitoring of policies, notably social inclusion actions funded by public authorities. This approach challenges the traditional “philanthropic” approach that treats socially excluded people as passive recipients of social assistance. Its starting point is human-rights based considering those socially excluded as individual rights holders who should be actively involved in all actions that concern them based on the principle “nothing about us without us”. Four speakers from different backgrounds (self-advocate, policy maker, civil society orgs) will share their experiences in involving marginalized groups – with a focus on success stories (of course not neglecting the challenges). Adopting a participatory approach, the workshop attendees, together with the speakers, will then discuss do’s and don’ts for successful involvement of marginalised/disadvantaged/minority groups into policy making, and come up with ‘key points for involving marginalized groups into policy-making’. | FACILITATOR Waltraud Heller, Programme Manager for Cooperation with Civil Society, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, Austria SPEAKERS 1. Zara Todd, European Network on Independent Living, Project Soctland, United Kingdom 2. Edwin Huizing, Executive Director, Hivos, Netherlands 3. Maximiliano Sheehan, Subdirector General, Procuración Penitenciaria, Argentina 4. Robert-Falcon Ouellette, Member of Parliament, Canada |
24 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | Health of Democracy in High-Income Countries: Restoring Trust in the Digital Era | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Open | Fishbowl | Many high-income countries find themselves at a particular juncture in history. Faced with a declining level of trust in government and a rapidly evolving digital landscape, new threats and challenges to traditional democracies have emerged. This fishbowl session will bring together high-level political and civil society leaders to explore how their countries are responding to these challenges in order to protect - and reinvigorate - the health of their democracies. Questions that may be asked include: 1. How can we engage citizens ‘beyond the ballot box’ in a meaningful way? 2. How can governments effectively respond to citizen movements and their demands? 3. What tactics are deployed to tackle digital threats including fake news and misinformation, especially when they influence elections? 4. What are the roles that different sectors of our societies should play to safeguard our democracies? | MODERATOR Wilma Haan, Chief Executive Officer, Open State Foundation, Netherlands SPEAKER 1. Paul Chaffey, State Secretary to the Minister of Digitalisation, Norway 2. Lee Jaeyoung, Deputy Minister of the Interior and Safety, South Korea 3. Ania Calderón, Executive Director, Open Data Charter, Mexico 4. John Weigelt, Chief Technology Officer, Microsoft Canada, Canada 5. Teele Pehk, Project Lead, Open Knowledge Foundation Estonia, Estonia |
25 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | Fostering Civic Engagement through Civic Tech and GovTech: Examples from the Field | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | English French | Participation | Panel | More and more citizens wish to take part in the development of govtech and civic tech. This session will bring together initiatives around the world that have tried to leverage this to make public service delivery more open, both in civil society organizations and in government, at national and local levels. It is aimed at anyone curious about engagement in the fields of civic/govtech, and particularly at those looking to start initiatives in their country or community. To what extent can such initiatives be used to make governments more open, efficient, accountable and inclusive? The goal of the session will be to share lessons from the field and compare approaches, impact, successes and difficulties. The session could lead to a toolkit for people willing to start a civic tech or govtech community and build structures to support them, and to enrich existing resources such as the Civic Tech Field Guide. | MODERATOR Cécile Le Guen, Senior Consultant, Datactivist, France SPEAKERS 1. Adriana Groh, Director of Prototype Fund, Open Knowledge Foundation Germany, Germany 2. Wu Min Hsuan, g0v.tw, Taiwan 3. Patrick Connolly, Co-Organizer, Civic Tech Toronto, Canada 4. Mathilde Bras, Open Innovation Manager, Etalab - French Government Digital Services, France 5. Juan Ignacio Belbis, Associate Researcher, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos, Argentina |
26 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | Feminist Skillshare: Give and Borrow Knowledge to Make Open Government More Inclusive | Open Heroines | English French | Inclusion | Workshop | This workshop will provide a space for participants to share vital skills. Women’s rights groups have both a clear role to play, and a clear benefit opportunity, from Open Government initiatives. They hold valuable lessons to be leveraged – and would benefit from using existing transparency tools to further their missions. However, in addition to often being underfunded and overstretched, women’s groups are rarely sought out to participate in Open Government processes. This skillshare will enable Inclusion track participants to share lessons in driving gender equality, and to gain new skills in return. The objective of this session will be to “matchmake” participants for sustained conversations – these topics are too big to cover in just an hour. Our goal is to foster a creative, inclusive environment for participants to meet and start sharing knowledge. Afterwards, OH will develop platforms (via Slack channels, blogs, follow-up calls, etc.) to build on these connections. | FACILITATORS 1. Mor Rubenstein, Data Labs and Learning Manager, 360Giving, United Kingdom 2. Sarah Orton-Vipond, Manager of Business Development & Partnerships, Development Gateway, United States 3. Shyamala Gomez, Executive Director, Centre for Equality and Justice, Sri Lanka |
27 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | Public Beneficial Ownership Registries: The Emerging Tool in the Global Fight against Corruption | 1. Canadians for Tax Fairness 2. Transparency International (TI) Canada 3. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | The proposed objective for this session is to convene a discussion about the global nature of money laundering through secret companies and to highlight international jurisdictions that are working to tackle this problem through publicly accessible beneficial ownership registries. Finally, we shall demonstrate how this open data tool is quickly becoming the global norm in the fight against corruption and showcase the Beneficial Ownership Leaders Network -- an international leadership group consisting of government champions working to promote the use of registries worldwide. The outcome is for audience members to recognize how critical it is for Canada to join its international partners in creating a publicly accessible registry. Various perspectives from experts will share how a publicly accessible registry can deter and deflect illicit funds flowing into the Canadian economy. At end of this session, we shall invite a representative of the Canadian government to make an announcement regarding progress on Canada’s efforts in advancing beneficial ownership transparency. | MODERATOR Sasha Caldera, Beneficial Ownership Campaign Director, Canadians for Tax Fairness, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Denis Meunier, Board Director, Transparency International Canada, Canada 2. John Penrose, Minister of State for Northern Ireland, United Kingdom 3. Iryna Sadovska, Deputy Minister of Justice, Ukraine 4. Robin Hodess, Incoming Civil Society Co-Chair of OGP Steering Committee & Director of Governance and Transparency, The B Team, United States 5. Mark Robinson, Executive Director, Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, United Kingdom 6. Zuzana Wienk, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Founder, Fair-Play Alliance, Slovakia |
28 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | Collective Actions to Eradicate Online Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content | 1. Government of Canada 2. Government of France 3. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Open | Panel | The panel is intended to outline the commitments of the Christchurch Call and identify concrete action implemented and/or in the process of creation to achieve the commitments. The goal of the panel is to highlight the international response to Christchurch and identify efforts taken to eradicate violent extremists and terrorists use of the internet. In addition, panel members will participate in fruitful discussion pertaining to potential issues and solutions to achieving the commitments outlined in the Christchurch Call. The panel will comprise of diverse participants, all of which exhibit an active and innovative role in tackling online harmful content. The panel will be composed of government representatives who can speak to countries online response and goals following the Christchurch attack. In addition, the panel will provide an academic and civil society perspective to the discussion. The inclusion of government, civil society and academia is an imperative aspect to providing the audience with a holistic understanding of the online response to Christchurch. | MODERATOR Kara Brisson-Boivin, Director of Research, Media Smarts, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Henri Verdier, Ambassador for Digital Affairs, France 2. Daniel Mellsop, High Commissioner to Canada, New Zealand 3. Brett Kubicek, Acting Senior Director, Centre for Community Engagement and Prevention of Violence, Canada 4. Micah Clark, Program Director, Moonshot CVE, Canada 5. Merlyna Lim, Canada Research Chair in Digital Media & Global Network Society, Carleton University, Canada |
29 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | Building Trust and Better Infrastructure: Best Methods to Engage Ctizens and Have Lasting Impact | 1. CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative 2. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | English French Spanish | Participation | Lightning Talks | Every year trillions of dollars of public funds are invested in infrastructure projects worldwide, but yet citizens are often excluded from infrastructure planning, preparation and delivery. From local community events ‘Barazas’ in Uganda, to Citizenship Transparency Commissions in Honduras, to radio outreach in Malawi, to community monitoring in Afghanistan, CoST, Hivos and other experiences demonstrate that when citizens are more fully involved, better and safer infrastructure is delivered on-time and to-budget and a greater environment of trust is enabled. In a series of lightning talks presented by government, civil society and citizen representatives we will focus on what has been applied and worked in vastly different contexts worldwide to bridge the gap between citizens and decision-makers. Speakers will share highlights from their civic engagement activities, challenges they faced, how they used innovation to overcome them and the wider implications of these activities. The session will be discursive; attendees will be invited to share their experiences and given key takeaways which can be applied across different settings and a range of sectors. | MODERATOR Hope Muli, Africa Regional Project Manager for Open Contracting, Hivos, Kenya SPEAKERS 1. Alfredo José Cantero Callejas, President, Transparency Commission, Honduras 2. Olive Kabatwairwe, Africa Regional Manager, CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative, Uganda 3. Ana Carolina Alpírez, Editor, Ojoconmipisto, Guatemala 4. Donald Kamthunzi, Research, Monitoring & Evaluation, Learning and Documentation Officer, Youth Net & Counseling, Malawi 5. Sayed Ikram Afzali, Executive Director, Integrity Watch, Afghanistan |
30 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | Breaking Barriers: Achieving Sustainable, Transparent, and Efficient Outcomes with Artificial Intelligence | 1. Converlens 2. United Kingdom Office for Artificial Intelligence 3. MindBridge Analytics 4. City of Edmonton | English French | Impact | Panel | In this session, the panel made up of AI industry experts and government organizations will share experiences around how AI can be incorporated into an Open Government model. Through open dialogue around best practices, challenges, opportunities, and success stories; this session will explore ways in which the AI private sector can help governments and other public sectors become smarter, more accurate, while increasing operational efficiencies. The discussion will also explore guidelines that will empower governments to confidently and responsibly procure AI, as well as to explore how to best use governments’ significant buying power to drive private sector adoption of these standards. The objective of this session is to provide participants with a deeper understanding of applying AI in government through a rich and insightful conversation, and a splash of healthy debate. It is our hope to inspire attendees to develop a framework that keeps AI transparent and maintaining accountability to citizens. | MODERATOR Eugene Chen, Chief Technology Officer, Darkhorse Analytics, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Norman Mendoza, Manager of Business and Technology Innovation, City of Edmonton, Canada 2. John Craig, Director of Government Sales, MindBridge Analytics, Canada 3. Thomas Workman, Director, Converlens, Australia 4. Sam Roberts, Open Government Policy Lead, Department for Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport, United Kingdom 5. Fanny Hidvegi, Europe Policy Manager, Access Now, Belgium |
31 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | Opening Justice through Access to Justice | 1. Justice Canada 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 3. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 4. Task Force on Justice - Pathfinders for Peaceful, Just and Inclusive Societies 5. Ministry of Justice of Argentina | English French | Inclusion | Panel | The panel will reflect on Open Justice commitments that improve access to justice and challenge attendees to make their own commitments. This high-level panel proposes to explore the relationships between open justice and access to justice and the way they advance open government. The principal goals of open justice are to increase access to justice and to ensure fairness in application by promoting a universal rule of law. Access to justice, in turn, is part of the foundation of sustainable democracies and can enable people and communities to advance their rights, access services, push for legal and regulatory protection, shed light on corrupt practices and effectively participate in governance processes. They are vital components for participation and inclusion. The panel will reflect on both access to justice commitments from diverse sectors and their implementation progress, and how they could be included in National OGP Action Plans and help open justice and challenge attendees to make their own commitments. | FACILITATOR Zaza Namoradze, Director of Berlin Office, Open Society Justice Initiative, Georgia SPEAKERS 1. Slamet Soedarsono, Deputy Minister of National Development Planning, Indonesia 2. Kate Flatley, Executive Director, Women's Justice Initiative, Guatemala 3. Marcos Bonturi, Director of Public Governance, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Italy 4. Mila Carovska, Minister of Labor and Social Protection, North Macedonia 5. Mark Benton, Vice-Chair, Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters, Canada 6. Eugenio Curia, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Argentina to Canada, Argentina 7. Eleanor Thompson, Lawyer, Namati, Sierra Leone 8. Allyson Maynard-Gibson, Former Attorner-General & Minister of Justice, Task Force on Justice, Bahamas |
32 | Thursday, May 30, 13:40 - 15:00 | ||||||||
33 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | Walking the Extra Mile: Pushing the Boundaries of Open Government Reforms | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | Confronted with newly emerging policy challenges and the pressure to make the business case for open government reforms, countries are increasingly finding new approaches to promote open government principles, including by: 1. Initiating an ambitious move towards an Open State (e.g. Argentina) 2. Developing whole-of-government frameworks for Open Government (e.g. Canada) 3. Making use of open government reforms to address wider policy objectives (e.g. migration, health) 4. Employing new and innovative tools to engage with their citizens and stakeholders (e.g. France) The panel will present countries’ efforts to push the boundaries of open government reforms and the impacts that they could and should have. Panel's objectives: 1. Identify and discuss innovative practices that go beyond traditional open government initiatives 2. Identify tools and lessons learned in the process of elaborating and elaborating practices that have had important impacts 3. Inform about the benefits of the adoption of a whole-of-government approach to open government and open state | MODERATOR Marcos Bonturi, Director of Public Governance, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Italy SPEAKERS 1. Andres Ibarra, Minister of Modernization, Argentina 2. Alex Benay, Chief Information Officer, Canada 3. Henri Verdier, Ambassador for Digital Affairs, France 4. Zuzana Wienk, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Founder, Fair-Play Alliance, Slovakia |
34 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | Carpe Diem! Civic Space for All! | International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) | English French | Participation | Fishbowl | This session will feature accounts from CSOs and governments illuminating: 1. How restrictions on civic space have frustrated the achievement of diverse OGP goals, from anti-corruption to effective service delivery 2. How the lifting of restrictions, or the provision of more enabling environments for civil society, unleashed the power of civil society to catalyze the achievement of OGP goals. The audience will assist in distilling lessons learned from the accounts, as well as sharing illustrative experiences of their own. | MODERATOR Mary Beth Goodman, OGP Envoy & Advisory Council Member, International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, United States SPEAKERS 1. Mai E'leimat, Co-Founder & Head of Strategy and Research, Al-Hayat Rased, Jordan 2. Mauricio Alarcon Salvador, Executive Director, Fundacion Ciudadania y Desarrollo, Ecuador 3. Merian Mani, Board Member, Bantay Kita, Philippines 4. Eric Bertram, Deputy Director of Political Affairs, Global Affairs Canada, Canada 5. Moses Kipkemboi Cheboi, Deputy Speaker of National Assembly, Kenya |
35 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | Fighting Fake News with New Approaches | Assemblée Nationale France | English French | Open | Panel | Misinformation and the spread of fake news online is a real threat to our democracies and the core idea of citizen engagement in the civic life. Many countries like France, the US, the UK and Brazil have witnessed the negative impact of misinformation online. As a result, some States have put in place regulatory frameworks to eliminate or block content online. This approach is raising concerns as it opens the door for content control, could endanger freedom of expression and the core values of the Internet : openness, decentralisation and neutrality. In parallel, the automated moderation processes put in place by social media platforms are not transparent neither effective. This panel will explore an alternative approach to tackle fake news, a community-based framework based on fact-checking, community monitoring and reporting as well as crowdsource databases. Speakers will discuss the efficiency and feasibility of this approach by looking at concrete cases studies. | MODERATOR Mauricio Mejia Galvan, Chief of Staff, Assemblee Nationale, France SPEAKERS 1. Bob Zimmer, Member of Parliament & Chair, Committee on Access to Information, Privacy, and Ethics, Canada 2. Billion Lee, Founder, Co-Facts, Japan 3. Christophe Deloire, Secretary-General, Reporters Sans Frontière, France 4. Anne Brouard, Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, France |
36 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | Making Public Procurement 10 Times Better: The Long & Winding Road to Systemic Impact and Great Services to Citizens | 1. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) 2. Transparency International Health Initiative (TI-HI) | English French | Impact | Knowledge Café | How can you save millions of dollars? How can you deliver better quality goods, works and services? How can you get more small, women or minority owned companies to do more business? How can you ensure that the right medicines get delivered to the right people for the right price at the right time? How do vital issues like universal healthcare get delivered effectively and efficiently? Open, fair and effective contracting practices can help you achieve these impacts and deliver vital services such as health. In this session, we will share how you can make public contracting 10 times better through open contracting and other innovative procurement solutions. Reformers from government and civil society will explain how they identified problems and built targeted interventions to achieve results. They will talk through what’s needed on the long road to impact and how they navigated politics, overcame blockers and went beyond transparency to get measurable impacts. Given the trillions of dollars involved, if done right, the impact of doing public contracting better can be transformational. With the help of TI’s healthcare program, we will look at how the promise of open contracting can get delivered in practice and make people’s lives better. | FACILITATOR Kathrin Frauscher, Deputy Executive Director, Open Contracting Partnership, Austria SPEAKERS 1. Sascha Haselmayer, Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Citymart, United States 2. Sally Hughes, Global Chief Executive Officer, International Association for Contract & Commercial Management, United Kingdom 3. Rafael Garcia Aceves, Open Contracting Director, Mexico City Digital Agency for Public Innovation, Mexico 4. Ugochi Ekwueme, Programme Associate, Reboot, Nigeria 5. Anastasiya Kozlovtseva, Head of International Relations, Transparency International Ukraine, Ukraine 6. Obita Walter, Director, Kenya Healthcare Federation, Kenya 7. Sebastiana Etzo, Senior Program Manager, Transparency International, United Kingdom |
37 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | Taking Advantage of Open Government: Fostering Political Participation, Innovation, Transparency, and Civic Participation | 1. Association for Election and Democracy (Perludem) 2. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) | English French | Participation | Fishbowl | Through the topic of participation, OGP want to enable citizens, civil society and business to participate in government decision-making. This leads to more trust in government and better outcomes. The session provides an opportunity to showcase innovations that enhance political participation as a collaborative initiative between government, political parties, civil society organizations, and private company. The aim of this session is to feature how these organizations make elections and the policy-making cycle more open and accessible so that public engagement can be more impactful. Apart from sharing how citizens are being involved in election, the session will also feature stories of innovations that strengthen public and political actor relation after they are elected. The outcome of the session is to create a cross-region country exchange between different actors to foster political engagement and transparency. This can be succeeded by discussing and developing map of initiatives, groups, and events in across the world where innovations, techniques, and collaboration presented on the session could be applied. By the end of the session, we hope to engage participants in thinking of ways in which we can improve cooperation between different political actors to foster political transparency, innovation, and civic participation | MODERATOR Jasmina Haynes, Chief Executive Officer, Integrity Action, Croatia SPEAKERS 1. Titi Anggraini, Executive Director, Perludem, Indonesia 2. Rumbidzai Kandawasvika-Nhundu, Head of Political Participation and Representation Programme, International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, Zimbabwe 3. Arif Rahman Hakim, Secretary-General, General Elections Commission, Indonesia 4. Julia Keutgen, Senior Transparency Adviser, Westminster Foundation for Democracy, United Kingdom 5. Simon Berger, Legal Officer, Haute Autorité pour la Transparence de la Vie Publiqu, France 6. Carolina Better, Senior Associate, Ideas42, United States |
38 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | Using Freedom of Information, Citizen Engagement, and Digital Tools to Open Up Decision Making | Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | English French | Impact | Workshop | Opening up governments through transparent decision making and enabling participations lays the groundwork to making governments accountable and responsive to citizens’ needs. Keeping them open and showing the impact is crucial for open government to work long term. In this session we want to showcase examples from throughout the world on how impact has been achieved through the smart use of freedom of information laws, engaging citizens and opening up decision-making. This workshop will first highlight three examples of engaging with citizens and using digital tools to create direct impact in short lightning talks. The three speakers will have ten minutes each to showcase their work, focusing on how they overcame the problems they faced by involving citizens. Then, participants will split into three groups according to the preference on the previous lightning talks. Presenters will facilitate a joint discussion and encourage participants to share the challenges they might be facing. Together we will co-creatively work on how the presented solutions could be replicated in different contexts or how they might inspire new approaches. | FACILITATORS 1. Andreas Pavlou, Network Lead, Involve, United Kingdom 2. Adriana Groh, Director of Prototype Fund, Open Knowledge Foundation Germany, Germany SPEAKERS 1. Michael Peters, Project Lead, Open Knowledge Foundation Germany, Germany 2. Audrey Tang, Digital Minister, Taiwan 3. Damian Carmichael, Open Government Project Lead, Department of Industry, Innovation, and Science, Australia 4. Maarja Toots, OGP IRM Researcher for Estonia, Tallinn Technical University, Estonia |
39 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | Unpacking the Toolkit of Data-Driven Approaches for Promoting Civic Participation in Decision-Making | 1. Open North 2. Crude Accountability | English French | Participation | Panel | Civic participation in decision-making is a core commitment of many OGP countries. This session will explore how data can drive civic participation in various levels of decision-making from both bottom-up and top-down perspectives. This session will also explore how data can bridge gaps between stakeholders including international, national, and grassroots civil society; and government and citizens. Civil society organizations from a diversity of political contexts will present their experiences using data-driven techniques to empower citizens to advocate for their needs, promote effective government-led public consultations, and strengthen accountability of the private sector. Discussions will focus on different approaches including GIS surveys, qualitative storytelling, data literacy education, and quantitative fiscal analysis. A session moderator will draw connections between each of these approaches and facilitate an interactive discussion among the panelists and the session participants. This panel discussion aims to answer the following questions: 1. What are the key elements in the “toolkit” of data-driven approaches for promoting civic participation in decision-making? 2. What are the benefits and drawbacks of both bottom-up and top-down approaches? 3. How can civil society organizations employ these approaches in various political contexts and across different levels of decision-making (grassroots, national, and international)? | MODERATOR Suthee Sangiambut, Applied Research Lead, Open North, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Kate Watters, Co-Founder and Executive Director, Crude Accountability, United States 2. Gubad Ibadoghlu, Senior Analyst, Center for Economic Research, Azerbaijan 3. Estela Navarrete, Founder, Datalat, Ecuador 4. Mark Pearson, Director General for Planning, Delivery, and Results, Natural Resources Canada, Canada |
40 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | Impact, Opportunities, and Challenges for Open Government: Creating and Implementing Co-Creation Commitments | 1. Agencia de Gobierno Electrónico y Sociedad de la Información y del Conocimiento (AGESIC) de Uruguay 2. Instituto Nacional de Transparencia, Acceso a la Información y Protección de Datos Personales (INAI) de Mexico | English French Spanish | Impact | Panel | The panel will provide a space for participants from various sectors and regions to reflect on their experience of implementing open government (national and subnational level) and to provide tools to do it successfully. Questions to be addressed include: Is the development status more influential than geography on the implementation of open government? How is co-creation being adapted and build on the ground and practice of the OGP Subnational Pilot? This session aims to improve the involvement and the responsiveness of public institutions and citizen participation in national and subnational governments through the understanding of the influence of the local context, problem-solving based on local contexts and the various jurisdictions in the open government making. After the summit, this session will produce a post-panel review, meeting notes/brochure from the panel on social media, attendees feedback, and call to action. | MODERATOR Kristina Reinsalu, Programme Director, e-Government Academy, Estonia SPEAKERS 1. Joel Salas Suárez, Commissioner, Instituto Nacional de Transparencia, Acceso a la Información y Protección de Datos Personales, Mexico 2. Virginia Pardo, Director of Digital Citizens Area, Agencia de Gobierno Electrónico y Sociedad de la Información y del Conocimiento, Uruguay 3. Federico Anghelé, Head of Institutional Relations, Associazione Riparte il Futuro, Italy 4. Jennifer Bretaña, Provincial Planning and Development Coordinator, Province of South Cotabato, Philippines 5. Álvaro Ramírez-Alujas, Investigator, Grupo de Investigación en Gobierno, Administración y Políticas Públicas, Chile |
41 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | Making Open Government Work at the Local Level through Strategic Intergovernmental Collaboration: Pilots, Practices, and Prospects | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS) | English French | Participation | Panel | In spite of signs of progress in the global open government community, many local governments are lagging behind and are grappling with challenges that include lack of capacity and tools, vulnerability of open government initiatives to political tides and shifting culture from closed to open. This session will provide a high-level forum for a facilitated conversation with five panelists from Argentina, Canada, Ghana, the UK and US, and will include subnational Ministers, Mayor, senior government officials and Civil society. The panelists will share lessons learned on how they are making open government work for them through intergovernmental collaboration as well as discuss grass-root initiatives such as federating and standardizing open data, improving open government impact and increasing public participation. They will conclude the session by mapping out a pathway and subsequent action items for a more sustainable open and digital government at the local level. | MODERATOR Helen Darbishire, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Executive Director, Access Info Europe, Spain SPEAKERS 1. Bill Walker, Minister of Government and Consumer Services, Government of the Province of Ontario, Canada 2. Éric Caire, Minister for Digital Government Transformation, Province of Québec, Canada 3. Alvaro Joaquin Herrero, Undersecretary for Strategic Management and Institutional Quality, Government of Buenos Aires City, Argentina 4. Anthony K. K. Sam, Mayor of Sekondi-Takoradi, Government of Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolitan Assembly, Ghana 5. Doreen Grove, Head of Open Government, Scotland, United Kingdom 6. Asma Cherifi, Founder, TACID Network, Tunisia |
42 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | Open Government Commitments for Accountable and Gender-Responsive Natural Resource Governance | 1. Extractive Industries for Transparency Initiative (EITI) 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) 3. Oxfam America 4. Natural Resource Governance Initiative (NRGI) 5. Development Gateway 6. Global Affairs Canada | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Knowledge Café | Through the experiences shared by women and men from resource rich countries, including Senegal and Dominican Republic, this session will explore five challenges at the intersection between women's rights and natural resource governance. Based on the lived experiences shared, and drawing on practitioner and academic research, we aim to put forward tangible proposals for gender transformative model national action plan (NAP) commitments to promote women’s meaningful participation in natural resource governance by: bridging the women’s rights and transparency movements; addressing negative impacts of the extractive sector on women through responsive local decision making; ensuring that data is accessible and relevant to a diverse set of stakeholders, including women in extractive communities; and promoting resource allocation approaches that include, and would benefit, women. The session will increase understanding by a range of stakeholders of structural and behavioural barriers to, and opportunities to enhance, inclusive participation in governance initiatives; and a shared strategy among reformers in open government about how to instigate reform to advance gender justice through the natural resource governance sector via OGP NAP commitments. This session would be relevant to government decision makers and senior industry representatives, as well as academics, journalists, civil society activists and policy makers. | FACILITATORS 1. Loriel Adonna Sanchez Ferreras, Extractive Industries Program Officer, Oxfam Dominican Republic, Dominican Republic 2. Charlotte Ornemark, Consultant, Publish What You Pay, United States 3. Carmen Canas, Senior Consultant, Development Gateway, Spain 4. Ian Thomson, Extractive Industries Policy Specialist, Oxfam Canada, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Mark Robinson, Executive Director, Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, United Kingdom 2. Suneeta Kaimal, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Chief Operating Officer, Natural Resource Governance Initiative, United States 3. Teresa Viloria, Member, Centro de Formacion para Mujeres Organizadas Maria Liberadora, Dominican Republic 4. Marieme Mbacke, Gender Program Officer, Publish What You Pay Senegal, Senegal 6. Memory Kachambwa, Executive Director, African Women's Development and Communication Network - FEMNET, Kenya 6. Leah Quinlan, Director of Environment Policy, Native Women’s Association of Canada, Canada 7. Leyla Chihuan, Deputy Speaker of the Congress, Peru |
43 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | Machine Learning for Public Good: Exploring Opportunities, Minimizing Risks | 1. Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society 2. Cívica Digital 3. Internews | English French | Open | Workshop | We hope to leverage our interdisciplinary expertise to discuss the opportunities and risks of deploying machine learning technologies for public interest purposes, particularly as it relates to local communities and marginalized groups. Our major objective is to describe a framework for how industry, academia, and civil society can come together to design automated systems deployed by governments that address risks pertaining to fairness, discrimination, due process, efficacy, privacy/security, and data availability. Given each of our unique areas of expertise, we will adopt a hybrid approach to engaging with these topics and the audience - launching into the topic through an introductory panel followed by discrete breakout groups where we can dive into particular applications of machine learning. The desired outcome is to educate policymakers about general cautionary principles through the use of real-world examples drawn from specific use cases, such as inspection prioritization systems and pretrial risk assessment systems, but also about specific opportunities to expedite bureaucratic procedures, expand access to justice/resources, and monitor the health of civil society. | MODERATOR Adam Nagy, Project Coordinator, Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, United States SPEAKERS 1. Ania Calderón, Executive Director, Open Data Charter, Mexico 2. Daniel Spealman, Chief of Party for INSPIRES Project, Internews, United States 3. Jenn Halen, Fellow, Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, United States 4. Kasia Chmielinski, Project Lead, Data Nutrition Project, United States |
44 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) and Diversity in National Security: Can We Ever Be "Bias-Free"? | Public Safety Canada | English French | Inclusion | Panel | Making room for inclusivity and diversity within national security decision-making, this panel will feature Canadian leaders, experts, and champions of the Government of Canada's tool, Gender-Based Analysis Plus. The panel will explore how an intersectional lens can be applied to government initiatives in the ever-evolving environment of Canada's national security, and how GBA+ is being used to communicate how the Government of Canada is safeguarding rights and freedoms and reducing stigmatization by opening doors to communities. | MODERATOR Catherine Clark, Host of 'Before the Bell', Canada SPEAKERS 1. Monik Beauregard, Senior Assistant to the Deputy Minister on National and Cyber Security Branch, Public Safety Canada, Canada 2. Caroline Xavier, Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet on Security and Intelligence, Canada 3. Tricia Geddes, Assistant Director for Policy and Strategic Partnerships, Canadian Security Intelligence Service, Canada 4. Rachel Schmidt, Research Fellow, Canadian Network for Research on Terrorism, Security, and Society, Canada |
45 | Thursday, May 30, 15:10 - 16:30 | ||||||||
46 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | Entrenching Open Government Principles, Culture, and Practices | Open North | English French Spanish | Impact | Panel | The audience will gain insight into strategies, tactics, and methods to make open government the norm in different contexts. These include inter-agency collaborations, support structures, targeted investments in disruptive and innovative pilots, and vectors of engagement a government requires to sustain measurable organisational culture transformation through successive administrations. Government and civil society panellists will speak to the longevity and impact of their respective open government experiences and the conditions in which open government culture, principles, and practices can thrive. The audience will consider and prioritise the enabling conditions for successful scaling up of reforms based on the approaches presented by panellists including: approaches to policy interventions, legal compliance, external stakeholder collaboration, leveraging international open government networks, and the incorporation of technical interventions (e.g. data standards and operational manuals). | MODERATOR Tracey Lauriault, Assistant Professor of Critical Media and Big Data at the School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Gustavo Ungaro, Comptroller General, City of São Paulo, Brazil 2. Lindsey Marchessault, Director of Data and Engagement, Open Contracting Partnership, Canada 3. Edwin Ikhuoria, Senior Advisor for Africa, ONE Campaign, Nigeria 4. Francis Bilodeau, Assistant Deputy Minister for Policy and Service, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada |
47 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | Peer-Learning for Effective Co-Creation: How Does Participation Work? | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Impact | Panel | Based on the recent IRM findings, this panel will discuss how co-creation of OGP action plans can become more inclusive and participatory. The panel will include lessons learned shared by IRM researchers, IEP, a selected CSO representative and government representatives. Participants will hear recommendations on how to conduct comprehensive public consultations and ensure inclusive and focused action plans. | MODERATOR Jeff Lovitt, OGP IRM International Experts Panel Member & Chair, New Diplomacy, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Ines Pousadela, OGP IRM Researcher for Argentina & Senior Research Specialist, CIVICUS, Argentina 2. Dragana Brajovic, OGP Point of Contact, Serbia 3. Sashee de Mel, Senior Program Manager, Transparency International Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka 4. Fredline McCormack, OGP IRM International Experts Panel Member, Sierra Leone |
48 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | Highlights, Lessons, and Updates from the Multi-Donor Trust Fund | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Impact | Panel | Spotlight on the OGP Multi Donor Trust Fund featuring awardees and representatives from DFID, AfD, GAC and WB, discussing updates from the Trust Fund and how it helps support critical areas for improvement. As a unique vehicle to advance the open government agenda, the OGP Trust Fund supports co-creation, implementation, research and thematic ambition. We will be discussing updates from the different windows that the Trust Fund is supporting, including key insights from our donors and partners. We will also hear from the 2018 co-creation awardees, and how they leveraged the Trust Fund to enhance the co-creation process. The session is also an opportunity to provide space for the community to ask questions, and surface ideas about innovative ways to engage in and support OG reforms. | MODERATOR Joe Powell, Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Open Government Partnership, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Asma Cherifi, Founder, TACID Network, Tunisia 2. Alex Tolgos, Governor, Elgeyo Marakwet County, Kenya 3. Charlotte Hull, Deputy Director, Department for International Development, United Kingdom 4. Jim Brumby, Director for Global Governance, World Bank, Australia 5. Anne Chinweze, Country Program Officer, Natural Resource Governance Initiative, Nigeria |
49 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | Channeling the Vocal and Provocative Youth: Designing Youth Forums to Meet OGP and SDGs Agendas | 1. Prime Minister's Office of the Republic of Armenia 2. Secretariat-General of the Government of Romania | English French | Inclusion | Fishbowl | The future of civic engagement is only as good as the relationship between governments and youth. The actual involvement of young people will determine the long term sustainability and impact of the OGP and the SDGs. We will go from exploring the main objectives and the benefits of youth engagement in civic participation, to success stories of youth CSOs taking action with impactful results, to examples of institutionalised structured dialogue between government and young people, as participants will showcase their inspiring experiences. We want to learn more about the approaches, best practices and challenges, in order to strengthen participants` knowledge on youth civic engagement. The session aims to explore the key factors sought to design OGP Youth Forums as an institutional component in the framework of OGP country and local level, as a strategic outcome for a stronger OGP. The session will expand participants` practical capacity to capitalize on youth perspective, by facilitating best practices exchange and by developing a checklist and/or a roadmap on how to build and grow a sustainable relationship between youth organizations and government. | FACILITATOR 1. Lilya Afrikyan, Chief Specialist, Prime Minister's Office, Armenia SPEAKERS 1. Jess Blair, Director, Electoral Reform Society Cymru, United Kingdom 2. Larisa Panait, OGP Point of Contact, Romania 3. María Pía Junquera Temprano, Director General of Public Governance, Ministerio de Política Territorial y Función Pública, Spain 4. Hercules Jim, Project Coordinator, Consultative Implementation and Monitoring Council, Papua New Guinea 5. Tatevik Barseghyan, Project Coordinator, Transparency International Armenia, Armenia |
50 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | Pushing Open Science Forward: Co-Creating New Ways to Unleash the Inclusiveness and Democratic Potential of Open Science | Environment and Climate Change Canada | English French | Open | Fishbowl | Open science aims to transform the practice and products of science to a more open and inclusive process that can empower citizens. By making methods, data and publications open and accessible to all, science can become more equitable and can contribute to a more democratic governance. For that potential to be realized, the focus of open science must shift from merely a benefit to the speed and competitiveness of science, and instead strive to involve participation from a diverse set of actors. The workshop’s goal is to bring together perspectives from scientists in academia and government from global North and South to generate tangible recommendations for governments on the creation of truly open and equitable science. The session will be a hack-a-thon style event and will produce a visual communication tool that can be shared widely. | MODERATOR Mark Leggott, Executive Director, Research Data, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Dominique Amezcua, Deputy Officer, Article 19 Mexico and Central America, Mexico 2. Richard Gold, Professor, McGill University, Canada 3. Jeanne Holm, Deputy Chief Information Officer, City of Los Angeles, United States 4. Juan Casanueva, Chief Executive Officer, SocialTIC, Mexico 5. Mireille Marcotte, National Manager for Plant Health Surveillance Unit, Food Inspection Agency, Canada |
51 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | Implementing Open Contracting and Beneficial Ownership to Combat Corruption in Challenging Contexts | 1. The Engine Room 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Indonesia 3. Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) 4. Transparency International (TI) Australia | English French | Open | Knowledge Café | Beneficial ownership and open contracting are increasingly incorporated into key anti-corruption commitments by many OGP countries. But many countries - particularly developing countries and those with significant oil, gas and mining sectors - face many difficult and complex implementation challenges. From a lack of technical capacity and resources to the absence of political will, these barriers prevent meaningful and impactful implementation and make it difficult to use these strategies to address real problems, like combating corruption and state capture. In this interactive and participatory session, we will create a space to discuss these challenges, highlighting local stories from developing countries. In small group discussions based on the challenges we identify together, participants will exchange stories, lessons, and, importantly, explore creative approaches that they can successfully adopt and replicate in their local context to ensure these important anti-corruption strategies have impact. Together, we will move the conversation around Beneficial Ownership and Open Contracting forward by identifying innovative ways to deal with the challenges, improve implementation and amplify impact. Participants will leave energized and equipped with new ideas, having connected with and learned from colleagues who are tackling similar barriers. | FACILITATORS 1. Anca Matioc, Catalyst Team Lead, The Engine Room, Mexico 2. Lisa Caripis, Research and Policy Manager for Global Mining Programme, Transparency International Australia, Australia 3. Rizky Ananda Wulan Sapta Rini, Project Assistant, Publish What You Pay Indonesia, Indonesia 4. Marie Lintzer, Senior Governance Officer, Natural Resource Governance Institute, France 5. Slamet Soedarsono, Deputy Minister of National Development Planning, Indonesia |
52 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | How Is Gender Mainstreaming in Open Government Policies Possible? | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Government of the United Kingdom | English French | Inclusion | Panel | The session aims to provide space for brainstorming on the most effective methods of applying a gender-focused approach as a default in the OGP agenda. The objective is to explore what actions are needed to ensure that gender-lens are implicit in the preparation, design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of National Action Plans. Looking at examples from Canada, Latin America, and Kenya, the session seeks to provide practical guidelines on gender mainstreaming in all areas of work under the OGP commitments to ensure that gender-focused perspective underpins all open government policies. The emphasis will be on developing a system for assessing the different implications of commitments for people of different genders. The session will be a dynamic panel comprised of research and policy experts, government officials, and OGP representatives. The discussion led by a moderator will be divided into smaller sections guided by a set of overarching questions, e.g. 1. Why do we need a gender-focused approach to open government? 2. How to ensure that gender is considered when designing OGP commitments? 3. What are the methods of gender mainstreaming in the implementation and evalauation of the commitments? The outcome will be a set of recommended actions for governments to promote gender mainstreaming and ensure further equity circulated within the wider OGP community. | MODERATOR Natalia Domagala, Data Policy and Governance, Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Jaimie Boyd, Director of Open Government, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada 2. Silvana Fumega, Research and Policy Director, Iniciativa Latinoamericana de Datos Abiertos, Argentina 3. Ana Brandusescu, Independent Data Consultant, Canada 4. Nathaniel Heller, Civil Society Co-Chair of OGP Steering Committee & Executive Vice President, Results for Development, United States 5. Soukeina Bouraoui, Director, Centre of Arab Women for Training & Research, Tunisia |
53 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | From Transparency and Openness of Data to Effective Anti-Corruption Strategies: Comparing Lessons from the Open Parliament and Open Government Communities | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. National Democratic Institute (NDI) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | When governments and parliaments commit to greater transparency and openness of data, but don’t address broader issues of corruption, it leaves parliaments, and OGP more generally, open to allegations of open-washing. Transparency in its own right has not led to increased accountability to the needs of the broader population of citizens, particularly marginalized groups such as women and ethnic minorities, who are more likely to be negatively impacted by high levels of impunity and corruption. This session is intended to explore areas where parliaments and governments have sought to link transparency and openness of data more directly to greater accountability and anti-corruption. Specifically, it is intended to explore whether there are lessons to be shared between the experience of governments, parliaments, and anti-corruption agencies in framing commitments. Are there success stories in terms of open government commitments that might inform better framing of open parliament commitments? | MODERATOR Noel Alonso Murray, Executive Director, Fundacion Directorio Legislativo, Argentina SPEAKERS 1. Mauricio Mejia Galvan, Chief of Staff, Assemblee Nationale, France 2. Krzysztof Izdebski, Policy Director, ePaństwo Foundation, Poland 3. Florencia Romano, Member of National Congress, Argentina 4. Jorge Santos, President of National Assembly, Cabo Verde |
54 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | Co-Creating a (Simple) Evaluation Canvas for Open Government Civic Tech | 1. DATA Uruguay 2. Sunlight Foundation 3. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 4. BetaNYC | English French | Impact | Workshop | Measuring impact of civic tech and opengov can sometimes focus heavily on quantitative metrics like “datasets shared” or “daily active users” when the real impact is often broad, cultural, and long-standing. In addition, many of these tools require financial resources, often lacking. How can civil society and governments develop better practices of documenting and measuring the impact of their work to promote an accurate, holistic evaluation of cultural and social progress through open government, civic engagement, and transparency? The objective is to create a simple but powerful canvas that help plan and measure immediate and long-term results of projects, accounting also for indirect results and changes - often overlooked. Three lightning talks will share evidence of direct and secondary (often unexpected) impacts, including policy changes, improved workflows in partner public agencies, and reduced prices for public services. The workshop will then move to work in groups, exploring the tools and metrics in use by civic tech advocates and aim to adapt them into an evaluation canvas, relevant across cultural contexts. Insights from this workshop will be developed into a public-facing evaluation canvas published by workshop facilitators for any civil society partners to use in their civic tech and open government projects. | FACILITATORS 1. Carla Bonina, Principal Researcher, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos, Italy 2. Noel Hidalgo, Executive Director, BetaNYC, United States 3. Katya Abazajian, Director of Open Cities, Sunlight Foundation, United States 4. Daniel Carranza, Co-Founder, DATA Uruguay, Uruguay 5. Audrey Tang, Digital Minister, Taiwan |
55 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | Implementing SDG 16+ through Multi-Stakeholder Collaborations: Innovations from OGP Members | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have been a major milestone for the global governance community. Open government can be an enabling tool for progress on these global goals, integrating the practices underlying a responsive and inclusive government to achieve these goals. Several OGP members have used the principles of open government, and their OGP action plans, as a platform for innovation and exchange with civil society to make progress on the SDG16 plus agenda to create peaceful, just, and inclusive societies. As we approach the first ever head of state check-in on the SDGs, to take place in New York in September, it is useful to examine how open government approaches are being used to advance SDG16 in different country contexts. This session will bring together leaders from implementing countries and from multilateral organizations to share perspectives on progress made thus far, as well as to discuss the challenges that have arisen along the way. 2 lightning talks by country leaders about how they’re implementing SDG16 through the OGP process will serve as a launching point for the discussion. Other panel members will then be invited to respond to 2-3 targeted questions about linkages between open government principles, the OGP and advancing the SDG16+ Agenda. | MODERATOR Sarah Mendelson, Distinguished Service Professor of Public Policy & Head of Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University, United States SPEAKERS 1. Mark Robinson, Executive Director, Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, United Kingdom 2. Jairo Acuna-Alfaro, Global Policy Advisor for Governance and Peacebuilding, United Nations Development Programme, Costa Rica 3. Marcos Bonturi, Director of Public Governance, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Italy 4. Anabel Cruz, Director, Instituto de Comunicación y Desarrollo, Uruguay 5. Nora O'Connell, Associate Vice President for Public Policy and Advocacy, Save the Children, United States 5. Yanuar Nugroho, Deputy Chief of Staff, Executive Office of the President, Indonesia 6. Edetaen Ojo, Executive Director, Media Rights Agenda, Nigeria |
56 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | How Ready Is Government for Artificial Intelligence? | Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) | English French | Open | Panel | Should a government official knock at the woman's door to inform her that she could be at risk of pregnancy? Should governments set up automatic processes to efficiently calculate your care benefits? Or should government exploit the power of data analysis to detect potential fraud and corruption in public procurement? Algorithms are increasingly present in government services as new generation of AI services emerge. As algorithms emerge in new government settings, ethical and accountability dilemas become evident. How should government use these new tools? What role will society play in these new setting? To what extent these evolution is going to be open and accountable to citizens? And to which extent should these new tools be informed by context and values different societies? We explore new research on AI readiness in 40 countries, a set of cases and consultations discussing the way forward | MODERATOR Naser Faruqui, Director of Technology and Innovation, International Development Research Centre, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Virginia Pardo, Director of Digital Citizens Area, Agencia de Gobierno Electrónico y Sociedad de la Información y del Conocimiento, Uruguay 2. Sabrina Martin, Senior Researcher, Oxford Insights, United Kingdom 3. Dorothy Gordon, Chair of Information for All Programme, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Ghana 4. Fabrizio Scrollini, Executive Director, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos, Uruguay 5. Riccardo Masucci, Global Director for Privacy Policy, Intel, United States |
57 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | OGP Local: Perspectives on the Advancement of Open Local Government | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Participation | Fishbowl | This session will focus on the possibilities and opportunities for advancing open local government, building on past experiences of OGP Local. This will include a moderated discussion with government and civil society and will touch on the thematics of inclusion & marginalized communities. 1. How do we scale open local government? 2. What has been and can be done to foster truly inclusive participatory processes? Specifically in regards to marginalized communities. 3. How do we ensure that we go beyond transparency? 4. How do we create synergies across all levels of government to advance open government? | MODERATOR Lucy McTernan, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Researcher, University of York, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Juana López Pagán, Director of International Affairs and European Projects, Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces, Spain 2. Mariano Heller, Secretario de Planificacíon, Consejo de Magistratura de Buenos Aires, Argentina 3. Tatang Muttaqin, Director of State Apparatus, Ministry of National Development Planning, Indonesia 4. Patricia Sarenas, Chair of the Board of Trustees, Mindanao Coalition of Development NGO Networks, Philippines 5. Open Seat for Audience Intervention |
58 | Thursday, May 30, 16:40 - 18:00 | ||||||||
59 | Thursday May 30 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Break the Roles: Putting Inclusion at the Center of Open Government | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Panel | With a primary focus on gender, this discussion will highlight practical examples of how we can all be ‘role breakers’ and what works to bring diverse voices into open government. | MODERATOR Jennifer Ditchburn, Editor-in-Chief of Policy Options, Institute for Research on Public Policy, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Aida Kasymalieva, Deputy Speaker of Supreme Council, Kyrgyz Republic 2. Hera Hussein, Senior Advocacy Manager, Open Contracting Partnership, United Kingdom 3. Randy Boissonnault, Member of Parliament & Vice-Chair of the Canadian Section, ParlAmericas, Canada 4. Blanca Ovelar, Member of Parliament & President, ParlAmericas Open Parliament Network, Paraguay 5. Delia Ferreira Rubio, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Chair, Transparency International, Argentina 6. Mary Robinson, Chair, The Elders, Ireland 7. Michael Cañares, Senior Research Manager on Digital Citizenship, World Wide Web Foundation, Philippines 8. Mark Barrenechea, Chief Executive Officer, OpenText, Canada |
60 | Friday, May 31, 09:00 - 10:20 | ||||||||
61 | Friday May 31 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Democracy Beyond the Ballot Box: Debating the Future of the Open Government Movement | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 3. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | English French Spanish | Impact | Panel | OGP in partnership with the Democracy, Conflict and Governance Program of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is organizing this plenary to provoke broader debate on the impact the open government movement in advancing transparency, accountability, and trust in institutions through cross-sectoral collaboration. This plenary will dissect the OGP in the context of broader geopolitical trends, and will debate the OGP’s potential, pitfalls and future. | MODERATOR Thomas Carothers, Vice President for Studies, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, United States SPEAKERS 1. Doug Rutzen, President, International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, United States 2. Lucan Way, Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada 3. Sandra Pepera, Director for Gender, Women, and Democracy, National Democratic Institute, United States 4. Joseph Foti, Chief Research Officer, Open Government Partnership, United States 5. Suneeta Kaimal, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Chief Operating Officer, Natural Resource Governance Initiative, United States 6. Zukiswa Kota, Monitoring and Advocacy Programme Manager, Public Service Accountability Monitor, South Africa |
62 | Friday, May 31, 10:30 - 11:50 | ||||||||
63 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | National Security and Democratic Values | Public Safety Canada | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | In a time of growing mistrust around information, surveillance and privacy, but also of rising Information Age threats from various sources, the role of government transparency and openness in order to protect and promote democratic values evolves and changes every day. The field of national security is often perceived as presenting a unique challenge to this imperative. While transparency is valued for its ability to inform citizens and enable democratic accountability, secrecy is also valued for its ability to prevent malicious actors from using sensitive information to harm us. This panel will feature experts from Canada, the US, and the UK as they explore the evolving landscape of transparency in national security, intelligence, and defence – to try and find the right balance between transparency and necessary secrecy. | MODERATOR Tim Sebastian: Host of 'Conflict Zone' and 'The New Arab Debates', United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Tufyal Choudhury, Senior Research Fellow, Rights Watch, United Kingdom 2. Alex Joel, Chief of the Office of Civil Liberties, Privacy, and Transparency, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, United States 3. Alex Carlile, Member of the House of Lords, United Kingdom 4. Mary Beth Goodman, OGP Envoy & Advisory Council Member, International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, United States |
64 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | A Survival Toolkit: Open Government in Restrictive Political Environments | 1. Twaweza 2. K-Monitor 3. ePaństwo Foundation | English French | Open | Fishbowl | Democracies are witnessing unprecedented challenges in terms of the trust in public institutions, rule of law or respect for civic space and human rights. Hybrid or semi autocratic regimes often maintain democratic institutions but do their best to empty them out. We will share our experiences in coping with uncertain socio-political contexts, veering into a discussion on the "survival toolkit" - strategies for civil society and civic tech in working in restrictive environments, including where a change of government brings with it a different attitude to open government, but channels for cooperation and advocacy are not yet explored. We will share experiences and success stories and aim to foster future collaboration among stakeholders from around the globe. We want participants to leave the session with fresh ideas and inspiration for their future activities. | FACILITATORS 1. Risha Chande, Director of Engagement and Advocacy, Twaweza, Tanzania 2. Sandor Lederer, Director, K-Monitor, Hungary 3. Krzysztof Izdebski, Policy Director, ePaństwo Foundation, Poland SPEAKERS 1. Marion Mondain, Human Rights and Civic Space Advisor, Publish What You Pay, United Kingdom 2. Ines Pousadela, OGP IRM Researcher for Argentina & Senior Research Specialist, CIVICUS, Argentina 3. Annabel Lee Hogg, Manager of Governance and Human Rights, The B Team, United States 4. Renato Morgado, Program Officer, Transparency International Brazil, Brazil |
65 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | Open Government and Service Delivery: Are We Missing an Opportunity to Act? | 1. Regional School of Public Administration (ReSPA) 2. OGP IRM Independent Researcher | English French | Impact | Lightning Talks | There are many challenges and opportunities related to service delivery and open government. The entire life cycle of service delivery —from needs assessment, reengineering, digitalisation and user satisfaction– is intertwined with the open government principles. So, how can we scale up open government to obtain service delivery wins? How can we balance innovation and standardization? This interactive session proposes a series of lightning talks to showcase experiences of open government to strengthen service delivery reforms and results. After a short introduction of the key questions on how to integrate open government into service delivery reforms (and vice versa), we will invite speakers from different regions, countries and sectors, from governments and CSOs, to share their hands-on experiences related to public service delivery and open government. Lightning talks will be used to brainstorm ways to tackle challenges and embrace opportunities and multidisciplinary approaches of implementing open government reforms to enhance public service delivery. Session coordinators will ensure the interaction of the session, and conversation takeaways will be captured through Twitter wall. | MODERATORS 1. Edna Karadza, eGovernment Expert, Regional School of Public Administration, Montenegro 2. Maria Soledad Gattoni, OGP IRM Researcher for Buenos Aires, Argentina SPEAKERS 1. Damjan Manchevski, Minister of Information Society and Administration, North Macedonia 2. Evis Qaja, OGP Point of Contact, Albania 3. Carolina Cornejo, OGP Point of Contact, Argentina 4. Dragana Brajovic, OGP Point of Contact, Serbia 5. Gordana Dimitrovska, OGP Point of Contact, Northern Macedonia 6. Florencia Guerzovich, Politeia Group, University of the State of Santa Catarina, Brazil 7. Candra Wijaya, Strategic Management Director, Wahana Visi Indonesia, Indonesia 8. Goran Pastrovic, Programme Manager, Regional School of Public Administration, Montenegro 9. Andrea Casares, Go! Austin, United States |
66 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | Open Government Innovations by Africa | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Impact | Panel | This session will showcase four innovative open government initiatives developed and deployed jointly by government and civil society in Africa. In showcasing these initiatives, this session seeks to facilitate the exchange and learning on innovative collaborative approaches being used to advance open government in the region. | MODERATOR Maureen Kariuki, Senior Regional Coordinator for Africa, Open Government Partnership, Kenya SPEAKERS 1. Zukiswa Kota, Monitoring and Advocacy Programme Manager, Public Service Accountability Monitor, South Africa 2. Oluseun Oniginde, Director, BudgIT, Nigeria 3. Ibrahim Shaw, Access to Information Commissioner, Sierra Leone 4. Abraham Korir Sing'oei, Legal Advisor, Executive Office of the Deputy President, Kenya |
67 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | Is Participation the Future of Governance? Leveraging OGP Commitments as a Tool for Participatory Policy Making | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Government of the United Kingdom | English French | Participation | Fishbowl | How can the open government agenda lead to changes on the ground and enable bottom-up policymaking? A goal of this session is to discover how governments can best utilise opportunities that open data and technology present to increase accountability, gain citizen trust, and implement OGP commitments on the local and individual level. Representatives of local and central governments and civil society will discuss their participatory OGP commitments and other data-and-tech-enabled policymaking projects to exchange learnings, provide feedback and develop a set of recommendations. We will showcase stories of inspiration and failure in participatory policymaking using examples from Scotland, Mexico, Kosovo, Indonesia, and Estonia. The session will explore new approaches to deepening open government reforms to stimulate changes on the ground and to innovating with the methods of governance. Discussants will provide key recommendations for effective participatory policymaking projects that will be compiled in an online toolbox alongside case studies discussed. | MODERATORS 1. Sam Roberts, Open Government Policy Lead, Department for Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport, United Kingdom 2. Natalia Domagala, Data Policy and Governance, Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Doreen Grove, Head of Open Government, Scotland, United Kingdom 2. Oscar Montiel, International Community Coordinator, Open Knowledge International, Mexico 3. Michael Cañares, Senior Research Manager on Digital Citizenship, World Wide Web Foundation, Philippines 4. Blerta Thaçi, Executive Director, Open Data Kosovo, Kosovo 5. Pauline Véron, Deputy Mayor of Paris, France 6. Ott Karulin, Strategy Unit Adviser, Government Office of Estonia, Estonia |
68 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 207 | Storytelling for Public Contracting Reforms: Data Literacy and Informed Citizen Reporting for Inclusive Public Contracting Reforms | 1. Tanzania Media Foundation (TMF) 2. Hivos | English French | Inclusion | Workshop | Citizens experience first-hand the high or substandard quality of public goods, services and works procurement by governments across the world. However, trust in the stories by citizens on the same, are increasingly facing the risk of being “white washed” and undermined resulting in them being categorized as fake news. Using interactive activities, case studies, strategies, techniques and emerging tools, shared by dynamic experts the 80 minutes workshop intends to: 1. Share on emerging technologies/platform for citizen friendly story telling 2. Identify techniques and strategies of increasing uptake and profiling of citizen-authored stories by privately owned media houses 3. Enhance the quality of data and evidence based citizens’ storytelling on diverse media platforms 4. Digital Security for citizens’ storytelling platforms in an era of shrinking civic space 5. Identify recommendations and session road map that can drive citizens’ storytelling for inclusive public contracting reforms | FACILITATORS 1. Hope Muli, Africa Regional Project Manager for Open Contracting, Hivos, Kenya 2. George Mwita, Deputy Director, Tanzania Media Foundation, Tanzania SPEAKERS 1. Enrique Naveda, Director, Plaza Publica, Guatemala 2. Mabrouk Khedir, Journalist & Documentary Filmmaker, Tunisia 3. Ochieng Rapuro, Managing Editor, Nation Media Group, Kenya 4. Anca Matioc, Catalyst Team Lead, The Engine Room, Mexico 5. Khairil Yusof, Coordinator, Sinar Project, Malaysia 6. John Allan Namu, Executive Director, Africa Uncensored, Kenya |
69 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | Is Open Government Really Inclusive? Raising Awareness of Challenges in Accessing Information and Data for First Nations and Indigenous Women in Four Countries | 1. Indonesian Parliamentary Center (IPC) 2. Article 19 Mexico and Central America | English French | Inclusion | Lightning Talks | The session aims to provide an opportunity for OGP stakeholders to identify, from country examples, challenges to address gaps that exclude first nations and indigenous women in accessing public information and data, in order to find potential comprehensive solutions with an inter-sectional approach. Expected outcomes: Participants will be able to identify differences and similarities across countries to understand exclusion of first nations and indigenous women in accessing public information and data. Panel speakers will provide inputs on the need to promote changes in the conception of incl first nat usion in OGP to address existing gaps between first nations and indigenous women and access to public information. Follow-up actions: Build a statement addressed to each country recommending the inclusion of concrete open government actions to reduce the existing gaps between indigenous women and first nations and public information and data in the next OGP National Action Plans. | MODERATOR Cinthya Cecilia Alvarado Rivera, Researcher, Article 19 Mexico and Central America, Mexico SPEAKERS 1. Yayan Hidayat, Researcher, Indigenous Peoples Alliance - AMAN, Indonesia 2. Dominique Amezcua, Deputy Officer, Article 19 Mexico and Central America, Mexico 3. Júlia Rocha, Project Advisor for Access to Information, Article 19 Brazil, Brazil 4. Mindy Denny, Director of Information Governance and Data Projects, First Nations Information Governance Centre, Canada 5. Gede Narayana, Chief Information Commissioner, Indonesia |
70 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | The Year of Justice: How OGP Can Advance Grassroots Justice Efforts to Foster Government Accountability | 1. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 2. Namati 3. Justice for All | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Fishbowl | In this session, we will hear from different OGP colleagues who have been able to use their National Action Plans to push forward access to justice reforms. We will hear how civil society organizations have successfully campaigned around access to justice and discuss how legal empowerment can foster positive dialogues between government and civil society. We will brainstorm how other countries can incorporate additional commitments into their plans in the years ahead. We will discuss ways that we can link OGP efforts with the upcoming reporting on SDG16 - taking place at the UN's High-Level Political Forum in July 2019 and the General Assembly in September. Together we will develop ideas for how to utlise the Government of Argentina's new role as OGP co chair alongside their commitment on access to justice to accelerate momentum on access to justice and legal empowerment in the coming 12 months. This event will complement a number of other high-level moments throughout 2019 where governments and civil society organizations will make concrete commitments that increase financing and protections for grassroots justice defenders. | MODERATOR Marlon Manuel, Senior Advisor to the Global Legal Empowerment Network, Namati, Philippines SPEAKERS 1. Fani Karanfilova, Executive Director, Foundation Open Society Macedonia, North Macedonia 2. Eleanor Thompson, Lawyer, Namati, Sierra Leone 3. Natalia Camburian, Program Coordinator, Soros Foundation Moldova, Moldova 4. Sandra Elena, Open Justice Program Coordinator, Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, Argentina 5. Luis Lozano, Judge, Supreme Justice Tribunal of Buenos Aires, Argentina 6. Maha Jweied, Consultant, Open Government Partnership, United States 7. Zaza Namoradze, Director of Berlin Office, Open Society Justice Initiative, Georgia |
71 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | Participatory Budgeting Beyond Box Ticking: Inclusive and Meaningful Participatory Budgeting in an Age of Inequality | International Budget Partnership (IBP) | English French | Impact | Workshop | There have been thousands of experiences with participatory budgeting (PB) around the world over the 30-plus years since the early days of the experiments in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Some PB experiences have produced meaningful advances in inclusion of citizens from more marginalized social groups, as well as real impacts in terms of improved services and outcomes. However, not all PB experiences have proved to be as inclusive and meaningful. What does it take to make PB experiences, particularly OGP NAP commitments around PB, more successful? This workshop will seek to provide participants with an opportunity to answer this question for themselves by digging deeper into PB trends, lessons and concrete experiences, then collectively applying those insights to their own contexts and needs. | FACILITATOR Brendan Halloran, OGP IRM International Experts Panel Member & Head of Strategy and Learning, International Budget Partnership, United States SPEAKERS 1. Daniely Votto Fontoura, Director, DVotto Consultancy, Brazil 2. Panthea Lee, Principal, Reboot, United States 3. Rebecca Haines, Senior Governance Advisor, CARE International, Canada |
72 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | Gender and Corruption: Developing a Roadmap for Gendered Approaches to Anti-Corruption Commitments in OGP Action Plans | Transparency International (TI) | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Workshop | In this session we will collectively identify how we can advance in the Open Government Partnership commitments aimed at fighting corruption through a gender perspective. The session will start with a brief presentation of the issue of gender and anti-corruption. Afterwards the participants will break out into groups to discuss, based on the participant’s experience of gender and corruption, one of three issues: 1. Types of corruption that have a gender dimension 2. Anti-corruption approaches that include a gender perspective which can be incorporated into OGP action plans 3. Ways to assess gender dimension of OGP anti-corruption commitments. The session will end with flash presentations by each group and a discussion on this important topic. | MODERATOR José María Marín, Programme Coordinator, Transparency International, Spain FACILITATORS 1. Sashee de Mel, Senior Program Manager, Transparency International Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka 2. Allison Merchant, Senior Gender Advisor, Open Government Partnership, United States 3. Heidi Marina Canzobre, Director, Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres, Argentina SPEAKERS 1. Delia Ferreira Rubio, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Chair, Transparency International, Argentina 2. Yama Yari, Minister of Transportation, Afghanistan |
73 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | Bias In, Bias Out: Building Better Artificial Intelligence | The Data Nutrition Project | English French | Open | Panel | Who is responsible for building better AI, and how can we practically tackle these issues? With artificial intelligence making headlines, the conversation has shifted to the mitigation of harmful bias in automated decision making. However, much of the focus has been on the implementation of the algorithms, rather than why they are biased in the first place. Often, the underlying cause is the data used to train the algorithms: the input determines the output, or 'Bias in, Bias out.' Come hear a panel of experts discuss current initiatives that address dataset health across sectors and use cases. From academia and research to government and industry, the panelists bring a unique breadth and depth of knowledge to the conversation, and will cover such topics as audits, standardization, policy, and education with regard to bias in AI and data. The organizers of this session encourage attendees to come with questions and challenges to pose to the panelists during the open Q&A portion of the session. | MODERATOR Sarah Newman, Senior Researcher, Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, United States SPEAKERS 1. Kasia Chmielinski, Project Lead, Data Nutrition Project, United States 2. Ashley Casovan, Director of Data Architecture and Innovation, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada 3. Alex Miller, President, Environmental Systems Research Institute, Canada 4. Moira Patterson, Global Affairs Program Director, IEEE Standards Association, United States |
74 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | Economic Reconciliation through Procurement: Increasing Indigenous Participation in Canada’s Corporate and Government Supply Chains | Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business (CCAB) | English French | Inclusion | Panel | For generations, Aboriginal people have provided goods, services and resources to help Canada grow. That tradition continues today with more than 50,000 Aboriginal businesses ready and able to compete in national and global markets. These businesses are thriving and eager for opportunity. But, for many reasons, Aboriginal businesses are still underrepresented in the supply chains of most Canadian corporations and Governments. That’s why the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business (CCAB) is looking for ways to strengthen connections between corporate Canada, Government and Aboriginal businesses from coast, to coast, to coast. For this dynamic panel, join CCAB President and CEO, JP Gladu as he speaks procurement best practices with some of the country’s leading corporate procurement champions. | MODERATOR Max Skudra, Director of Research and Government Relations, Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business, Canada SPEAKERS 1. JP Gladu, President & Chief Executive Officer, Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business, Canada 2. Nicole Bourque-Bouchier, Chief Executive Officer & Co-Owner, The Bouchier Group, Canada 3. Sean Finn, Executive Vice-President for Corporate Services and Chief Legal Officer, CN Rail, Canada 4. David Acco, President, Acosys Consulting Services Inc, Canada 5. Hillary Thatcher, Executive Director, Indigenous Services Canada, Canada |
75 | Friday, May 31, 12:00 - 13:20 | ||||||||
76 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | Stronger Media Systems for Open Government | Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | The session will explore opportunities provided by the OGP process for improving the democratic governance of media systems. Because the media play a critical role in the open government movement, and given the rise of "fake news" and declining public trust in institutions, the session will aim to raise the profile of the media sector as a critical thematic area within the OGP. The session will: 1. Explore how the OGP process can help media reformers improve media systems 2. Identify ongoing activity in this area in the OGP community 3. Discuss how to effectively link work around media to other thematic priorities 4. Strategize how to increase the involvement of the media development and freedom of expression communities in the OGP at the national and global level | MODERATORS 1. Nicholas Benequista, Research Manager and Editor, Center for International Media Assistance, United States 2. Chrystia Freeland, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Susan Jane le Jeune d'Allegeershecque, British High Commissioner to Canada, 2. Charlotte Hull, Deputy Director, Department for International Development, United Kingdom 3. Carolina Hidalgo Herrera, Deputy Speaker of Legislative Assembly, Costa Rica 4. Gilbert Sendugwa, Director, Africa Freedom of Information Centre, Uganda 5. Craig Matasick, Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, France 6. Daoud Kuttab, Director General, Community Media Network, Jordan 7. Zuzana Wienk, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Founder, Fair-Play Alliance, Slovakia 8. Romina Colman, Data Journalist, La Nación Data, Argentina |
77 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | Analysing the Political Economy of Gender and Open Government: Why It Matters and How to Do It | 1. CARE International 2. Oxfam International 3. Kaduna State | English French | Inclusion | Workshop | This workshop will stimulate discussion and reflection on why gender matters to the quality of reforms to government openness and accountability. Participants will use real country case studies to explore how gender and other power inequalities shape the types of open government issues that are prioritised and who participates in and benefits from reform. Participants will also learn about practical approaches they can use to support the participation of marginalised women in open government processes. The workshop aims to increase participants’ curiosity about the intersection of gender and open government and their interest in using practical tools to achieve more gender-aware and politically smart open government processes. The workshop will also provide an opportunity to test and gain feedback on parts of the gender and political economy analysis toolkit being developed for OGP as part of the Feminist Open Government Initiative. | FACILITATORS 1. Rebecca Haines, Senior Governance Advisor, CARE International, Canada 2. Tam O'Neil, Senior Gender Advisor, CARE International, United Kingdom 3. Kara Medina, Gender Project Officer, CARE International, Philippines 4. Hadeel Qazzaz, Middle East and North Africa Regional Gender Coordinator, Oxfam International, Palestine 5. Rebecca Sako-John, Executive Director, WenakLab, Nigeria |
78 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | Advancing the Cycle of Justice: Journalists, Activists, Officials, and Enforcement | 1. Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) 2. Transparency International (TI) | English French | Participation | Panel | This session aims to identify National Action Plan commitments essential to supporting in-country ecosystems for exposing and trying transnational grand corruption. Investigative journalists and civil society advocates have made significant breakthroughs in the fight against corruption through a Global Anti-corruption Consortium launched by governments and civil society at the 2016 OGP Global Summit. By detailing real-world cases and bringing together key voices from media, advocacy, law enforcement, and diplomacy, this discussion will highlight how this new kind of partnership can help governments secure justice and advance anti-corruption reform. An investigative journalist and an activist will offer behind-the-scenes details of working a recent case. A government champion will discuss how this work informed official investigations and advanced justice in a grand corruption case and follow on reform. Discussants will also highlight needed actions to ensure the operating conditions essential for civil society to undertake this work. | MODERATOR Anne Koch, Program Director, Global Investigative Journalism Network, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Paul Radu, Co-Director and Chief of Innovation, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, Romania 2. Casey Kelso, Advocacy Director, Transparency International, United States 3. Karen Greenaway, Attorney, Transparency International, United States 4. Alex Covington, Office of Multilateral and Global Affairs, Department of State, United States |
79 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | Pitfalls and Bright Spots: Crowdsourcing and Validating Why Social Accountability Designs Succeed and Fail | 1. Results for Development (R4D) 2. Wahana Visi Indonesia (WVI) | English French | Impact | Workshop | The objectives of this session are twofold: 1. To use practitioner experience and recent evaluations to identify social accountability designs that can help and hinder the impact of accountability efforts 2. To identify what approaches are worth further experimentation and piloting Using a set of lessons from social accountability from recent evaluations, we will co-develop a mapping of factors that participants predict are associated with successful and less social accountability work, resulting in a set of recommendations for future adaptive evaluations to increase knowledge and evidence of “what works” in social accountability. | FACILITATORS 1. Candra Wijaya, Strategic Management Director, Wahana Visi Indonesia, Indonesia 2. Preston Whitt, Program Officer, Results for Development, United States 3. Courtney Tolmie, Senior Program Director, Results for Development, United States 4. Besinati Mpepo, Technical Director for Social Accountability, World Vision International, United Kingdom 5. Yanuar Nugroho, Deputy Chief of Staff, Executive Office of the President, Indonesia |
80 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | Fostering a Democratic Digital Space | 1. Heritage Canada 2. Global Affairs Canada 3. Privy Council Office of Canada | English French | Open | Panel | A session to discuss how to foster a democratic environment within the digital space. | MODERATOR Collette Brin, Professor, Université Laval, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Thomas Friang, Head of Advocacy, Reporters Sans Frontière, France 2. Isabelle Mondou, Associate Deputy Minister, Heritage Canada, Canada |
81 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | Beyond Inclusion! From Inclusivity to Responsiveness in Public Procurement to Empower Women, Youth, and Underrepresented Communities | Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | English French | Inclusion | Challenge Clinic | Our main objective is to unpack some impressive pioneering efforts and challenges encountered in working towards responsive, open and inclusive public contracting through our experience with diverse, underrepresented groups, including: 1. Women, youth and persons with disability-led businesses in Kenya 2. People living with HIV/AIDS using open contracting for advocacy to improve access to HIV treatment in Guatemala 3. Indigenous communities claiming due royalties from government contracting with extractive sector companies in the Philippines 4. Access to public health services for people with disabilities in Indonesia Outcomes: Unveiling the dimensions and potential impacts of responsive, open and inclusive public contracting, share and inspire others, and collect key questions. | FACILITATOR Ana Sofía Ruiz, Chief of Operations, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos, Costa Rica SPEAKERS 1. Kivutha Kibwana, Governor, Makueni County, Kenya 2. Jennifer Bretaña, Provincial Planning and Development Coordinator, Province of South Cotabato, Philippines 3. Siti Juliantari Rachman, Campaign Program Manager, Indonesia Corruption Watch, Indonesia 4. Daniel Ambelis de Leon, Open Contracting Researcher, International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, Guatemala 5. Hera Hussein, Senior Advocacy Manager, Open Contracting Partnership, United Kingdom 6. Angelica Dacanay, Communications and Advocacy Officer, Bantay Kita, Philippines 7. Hope Muli, Africa Regional Project Manager for Open Contracting, Hivos, Kenya 8. Michael Cañares, Senior Research Manager on Digital Citizenship, World Wide Web Foundation, Philippines 9. Fiona Smith, Independent Researcher, United Kingdom 10. Silvana Fumega, Research and Policy Director, Iniciativa Latinoamericana de Datos Abiertos, Argentina 11. Lucy Mungala, Gender Expert, Hivos, Kenya |
82 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | Openness Under Surveillance: Balancing Transparency and Privacy Measures | 1. Open Data Charter (ODC) 2. SocialTIC | English French | Open | Workshop | Fighting for transparency and protecting privacy are two sides of the same coin - both principles seek to prevent corruption, strengthen security, promote freedom of expression, strengthen democracy and construct solid democratic institutions that have the interests of their citizens at heart. However, the way governments and private companies are increasing the use of data-driven technologies that collect and use data about individuals in secretive, highly controversial ways is creating suspicion and unease. Recent stories that uncovered how personal data has been misused, including ways in which government and corporate surveillance are violating human rights and threatening civic space, have further tipped the scale in favour of restricting access to information. With transparency measures being rolled back due to privacy-related challenges in a number of contexts, these are serious threats to the idea that openness can help advance social progress. This session will focus on discussing tactics to avoid back peddling on important strides in open government reforms while thinking of new and innovative ways that open, ethical and accountable governance of data can help safeguard the privacy and security of citizens. | FACILITATORS 1. Juan Casanueva, Chief Executive Officer, SocialTIC, Mexico 2. Natalia Carfi, Deputy Director, Open Data Charter, Argentina SPEAKERS 1. Helen Darbishire, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Executive Director, Access Info Europe, Spain 2. Fanny Hidvegi, Europe Policy Manager, Access Now, Belgium 3. Eduard Martín-Borregon, Director of Data, Project on Organizing Development Education and Research - PODER, Mexico |
83 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forums: Best Practices and Challenges Moving Forward | 1. Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Participation | Panel | As most OGP participants move to their third or fourth action plan cycle, what are the challenges and the opportunities that working with a forum present. 1. How to broaden the base to include all interested parties while maintaining a truly participative process? 2. How to keep all actors engaged throughout the process, especially during implementation? 3. How to deal with cases in which actors actively decide not to be part of the forum or walk out of it, but wish to continue engaging with the OGP process domestically or internationally? This session will address these and other questions with participation of both government officials and civil society representatives from country and local OGP members. | MODERATOR Denisse Miranda, Chief of Independent Reporting Mechanism, Open Government Partnership, Honduras SPEAKERS 1. Mélanie Robert, Executive Director of Information Management and Open Government, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada 2. Rob Davidson, Civil Society Co-Chair of Canada OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forum & Founder, Open Data Institute Ottawa, Canada 3. Doreen Grove, Head of Open Government, Scotland, United Kingdom 4. Lucy McTernan, Civil Society Member of OGP Steering Committee & Researcher, University of York, United Kingdom 5. Mónica Villegas, Senior Project Manager, Fundación Corona, Colombia 6. Fernando Grillo Rubiano, Director, Administrative Department of the Public Function, Colombia |
84 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | Agile Procurement Case Studies: How Better Government Purchasing Decisions Yield Better Citizen Outcomes | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | English French | Participation | Lightning Talks | This session will bring various leading Agile Procurement experts together to share best practices and lessons learned drawn from real case studies. After attending and actively engaging throughout this session, participants will better understand Agile Procurement and be able to apply practical and tangible recommendations towards their own Agile Procurement initiatives, yielding better government purchasing decisions and outcomes for citizens. | MODERATOR Anthony P. Sheehan, Senior Director for Digital Delivery, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Yama Yari, Minister of Transportation, Afghanistan 2. Marie-Pierre Parenteau, Strategic Program Policy Manager, Transport Canada, Canada 3. Robert Robinson, Director, Transport Canada, Canada 4. Farida Dauzova, Analyst, National Public Procurement Authority, Kyrgyz Republic 5. Lindsey Marchessault, Director of Data and Engagement, Open Contracting Partnership, Canada 6. Chantal Donaldson-Foyer, Head of Product, Government Digital Service, United Kingdom |
85 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | The State of Open Data: Rebooting Open Data Interventions on the Road to 2030 | 1. State of Open Data 2. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) | English French Spanish | Impact | Knowledge Café | This session offers participants a hands-on opportunity to consider next-generation open data interventions with emphasis on open government and the sustainable development goals. In the last decade open data has been used to address many open government and development challenges, yet there is a widely perceived impact gap, and many projects still focus on portals rather than problem solving. Using a design canvas, this session help participants plan politically-aware, strategic open data projects, recasting the idea of OGP open data commitments are problem, rather than portal, specific. The session will share practical learning from the State of Open Data book: a collaborative review by over 60 authors look at 16 sectors, 7 regions, 7 core issues, and 7 stakeholder groups to reflect on what works for open data and how to ensure measurable impact. The book, supported by the Open Data for Development network, will launch during OGP Week. | FACILITATOR Tim Davies, Co-Editor of State of Open Data & Co-Director, Practical Participation, United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. Mor Rubenstein, Data Labs and Learning Manager, 360Giving, United Kingdom 2. Teresa Scassa, Research Chair in Information Law and Policy, University of Ottawa, Canada 3. Marie Lintzer, Senior Governance Officer, Natural Resource Governance Institute, France 4. Sandra Elena, Open Justice Program Coordinator, Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, Argentina 5. Jorge Florez, Program Manager, Global Integrity, United States 6. Jamison Crowell, Project Manager, Open Data Watch, United States |
86 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | Declassification of Government Records: A Way Forward towards Improving Transparency | Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada | English French | Open | Panel | The Information Commissioner of Canada will organize and moderate a panel on the benefits of automatic declassification of government information. This panel has an intersectional approach as it falls within both the Participation and the Open track themes of this year’s Open Government Partnership Global Summit. Archivists, government security classification experts and academics from Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and Argentina will come together to explain how the declassification regimes function in their countries, and discuss how removing restrictions on historical government records can improve access to records, reduce the need to make access requests, and make processing of historical national security records less complex. | MODERATOR Caroline Maynard, Information Commissioner of Canada, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Malcom Todd, Head of Policy, The National Archives, United Kingdom 2. David J. Mengel, Deputy Director of National Declassification Center, National Archives and Records Administration, United States 3. Nate Jones, Director of the Freedom of Information Act Project, National Security Archives, United States 4. Allison Knight, Senior Director of Investigations, Office of the Information Commissioner, Canada 5. Wesley Wark, Professor, University of Ottawa, Canada |
87 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | The Present and Future of Public Algorithms | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Tecnologico de Monterrey | English French | Inclusion | Panel | Government have increasingly begun using algorithms to automate parts of decision-making and service delivery across sectors. While there are arguments of increased efficiency and capacity, there are significant risks related to opacity of data and systems that inform these algorithms. Unlike private sector algorithms, public algorithms are supposed to serve the public interest and ensure accountability to citizens like any other government function. This panel will discuss about the basic principles that public algorithme should respect, how the pulic administration can implement these principles, and how private sector algorithms can be used by public administration. | MODERATOR Ashley Casovan, Director of Data Architecture and Innovation, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Amélie Banzet, Head of Open Government, Etalab - French Government Digital Services, France 2. Robin Hodess, Incoming Civil Society Co-Chair of OGP Steering Committee & Director of Governance and Transparency, The B Team, United States 3. Juan Ortiz Freuler, Policy Fellow, World Wide Web Foundation, United States |
88 | Friday, May 31, 13:40 - 15:00 | ||||||||
89 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | Operationalising Inclusiveness: How Do We Make Sure That National Action Plans Are Participatory and Inclusive? | 1. World Wide Web Foundation 2. International Development Research Centre (IDRC) 3. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) 4. The Carter Center | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Workshop | A major critique of the National Action Plan co-creation process is in that it gives the most voice to the "usual suspects", the "already-empowered" constituencies, or the "habitually-included" groups. This session will seek to answer the question of how to ensure that National Action Plans are prepared with the widest participation as possible and how to include sectors that have not typically been included by OGP member countries. One such example comes ensuring women’s participation in OGP processes and the inclusion of their priorities and objectives in the OGP agenda. Currently, less than 2% of OGP commitments currently consider gender implications at all. As part of the Feminist Open Government research project, researchers explored the co-creation processes of 13 OGP countries to understand how gender dynamics impact the design of national action plans, and to understand new opportunities to elevate women's voices, and ultimately to drive more inclusive and innovative approaches to opening government. The publication will be shared at the session. | FACILITATORS 1. Katie Clancy, Program Management Officer, International Development Research Centre, Canada 2. Michael Cañares, Senior Research Manager on Digital Citizenship, World Wide Web Foundation, Philippines 3. Silvana Fumega, Research and Policy Director, Iniciativa Latinoamericana de Datos Abiertos, Argentina SPEAKERS 1. Laura Neuman, Director, Carter Center, United Srtates 2. Yanuar Nugroho, Deputy Chief of Staff, Executive Office of the President, Indonesia |
90 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | Protect Speaking Out! How Censorship Laws, Internet Shutdowns, and Social Media Taxes Threaten Open Government and Economic Growth | The B Team | English French | Participation | Fishbowl | Threats to freedom of expression, assembly and association are increasing throughout the world. Internet shutdowns, tax and fees for social media, and censorship laws undermine freedom of expression and stifle citizens ability to speak out, to demand accountability, and push for better governance. This concerning trend poses a threat to citizens, civil society organizations, and the private sector. This session will unpack country case studies to explore how censorship efforts and attacks on civil society are a serious threat to open government while highlighting stories where civil society has worked alongside the private sector to thwart dangerous government action and legislation. We will also outline the business case for civic rights and discuss why the private sector should be concerned about the global crackdown on civic rights and civil society and the implications it has on pushing for more open government. We will`highlight ways in which the private sector is playing an increasing role in global governance efforts and are taking action to support civic rights. The B Team will also share findings from its October 2018 report The Business Case for Protecting Civic Rights, that examines the economic impact of respect for civic rights and civic space. | MODERATOR Annabel Lee Hogg, Manager of Governance and Human Rights, The B Team, United States SPEAKERS 1. Ziya Guliyev, CIVICUS Board of Directors & Founder, Baku Academy of International Law and Human Rights, Azerbaijan 2. Marti Flacks, Deputy Director, Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, United States 3. Marlene Floyd, National Director for Corporate Affairs, Microsoft, United States 4. Robin Hodess, Incoming Civil Society Co-Chair of OGP Steering Committee & Director of Governance and Transparency, The B Team, United States 5. Philippe-André Rodriguez, Senior Advisor for Center for International Digital Policy, Global Affairs Canada, Canada |
91 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | Overcoming Water Inequality: Voices of Inspiration from the Ground Up | 1. World Resources Institute (WRI) 2. Fundación Avina 3. Water Integrity Network (WIN) 4. Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) | English French | Inclusion | Lightning Talks | Lightning talks will be presented by activists and allies fighting for clean water in vulnerable under-represented communities. Speakers will share their experiences seeking access to potable water and protect local waters sources, the struggle of the local associations and users, lack of access to clean water, the impact of pollution, lack of basic water and sanitation and the struggle for a recognition of a right to clean water as a human right. Participants will tell the audience how voices have been excluded in decision-making related to water in their communities; appropriate processes for acknowledging and recording discriminatory practices that are longstanding and what they have done to change this dynamic through crisis’s or opportunities. Organizers will capture this knowledge and discuss with the audience how to address all the dimensions of marginality, quality, availability, accessibility and affordability to give more voice and power to groups and individuals who are vulnerable which will be developed into Guidance for Governments by the OGP Community of Practice on water and open government. | MODERATOR Carole Excell, Acting Director for Environmental Democracy Practice, World Resources Institute, United States SPEAKERS 1. Melody Lepine, Director, Mikisew Cree First Nation, Canada 2. Aisha Khan, Chief Executive Officer, Mountain and Glacier Protection Organization, Pakistan 3. Aislin Livingstone, Water Program Coordinator, Gordon Foundation, Canada 4. Gloria Tobón de Garza, Member, Asociacion de Usuarios del Agua de Saltillo, Mexico 5. Annastazia Rugaba, Advocacy and Engagement Manager, Twaweza, Tanzania |
92 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | Asset Recovery in OGP: Peer-Learning on Recovery, Return, and Monitoring - Lessons from the Field | 1. Africa Network For Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ) 2. MacArthur Foundation | English French | Impact | Fishbowl | This session aims to promote peer-learning in assets recovery and utilisation. Assets recovery is yielding profits in Nigeria including investments for the government’s social intervention programs for Nigeria’s poorest citizens. Sri Lanka, Tunisia and Ukraine have equally stepped up efforts to recover stolen assets but have increasingly faced questions about utilization and management. What are the factors responsible for the different outcomes in assets recovery and utilisation in these countries? What are the major lessons for countries having assets recovery in their OGP processes? What can national, regional and international networks do to remove bottlenecks facing assets recovery by victim countries and local politics that undermine credible utilisation? These are the questions that would engage this session. At the end of this session, specific recommendations on how to strengthen the implementation of the GFAR Principles in OGP Countries will be proposed and participants will build a coalition that will seek the removal of obstacles to assets recovery and canvass mechanism for collaborative, inclusive and transparent utilisation of recovered assets in victim countries. The Best Practices on monitoring of recovered assets and utilisation will be shared with participants. | MODERATOR Patricia Adams, Executive Director, Probe International, Canada FACILITATORS 1. Oladayo Olaide, Deputy Director of Nigeria Office, MacArthur Foundation, Nigeria 2. Leo Atakpu, Deputy Executive Director, Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, Nigeria 3. Blessing Ogu, Programme Assistant, Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, Nigeria SPEAKERS 1. Fatima Kanji, Research and Policy Manager, International State Crime Initiative, United Kingdom 2. David Ugolor, Executive Director, Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, Nigeria 3. Iorwakwagh Apera, National Coordinator, National Social Safety Nets Coordinating Office, Nigeria 4. Sonia Warner, Senior Governance Adviser, Department for International Development, United Kingdom 5. Sadiq Isah Radda, Executive Secretary, Presidential Advisory Committee on Anti-Corruption, Nigeria 6. Sarath Jayammane, Director General, Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption, Sri Lanka |
93 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | An Indigenous Framework for Open Government That Embodies the UNDRIP and the Declaration for Mother Earth with the Aim to Achieve Meaningful Self-Government for All Indigenous Peoples | Participants of the Indigenous Gathering | English French | Inclusion | Panel | This will include a collaborative and intercultural presentation of a detailed and holistic framework for open government and self-government, a discussion of open journalism from an Indigenous perspective and how this framework is grounded in the necessary preservation of cultural and natural environments. Indigenous Peoples and Governance should not be an after-thought in open government. | Speakers will be decided upon the conclusion of the Indigenous Gathering side event prior to the summit. |
94 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | #KnowYourGovernment: Youth Leadership and Open Government in West Africa | 1. International Republican Institute (IRI) 2. Africtivistes | English French | Participation | Knowledge Café | From Mauritania to Nigeria, West African youth are leading innovative technical initiatives and mass movements to promote national and regional open government. This session brings together four West African youth leaders to facilitate peer learning on best practices in promoting youth engagement and leadership in the open government space. The session will produce a catalog of best practices for promoting youth engagement and leadership in transparency and accountability initiatives. It will incubate ideas for innovative regional and global approaches to youth and open government, facilitating the relationships and building the networks necessary to realize global change. | FACILITATORS Daniella Montemarano, Program Officer for West Africa, International Republican Institute, United States SPEAKERS 1. Eleanor Thompson, Lawyer, Namati, Sierra Leone 2. John Allan Namu, Executive Director, Africa Uncensored, Kenya 3. Edwin Ikhuoria, Senior Advisor for Africa, ONE Campaign, Nigeria |
95 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | OGP’s First Flagship Report: How to Use It | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French | Impact | Knowledge Café | In a knowledge cafe style setting, participants will discuss the many parts of the flagship report, including global findings, and findings on civic space, anti-corruption, and public services. In particular, the session will feature how to use member pages from the new report, and will bring together data users from government and civil society with the data producers from contributing organizations. | FACILITATORS 1. Joseph Foti, Chief Research Officer, Open Government Partnership, United States 2. Renzo Falla, Senior Research Officer, Open Government Partnership, Peru |
96 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | How Can Citizen-Centered Technological Tools Generate More Open, Transparent, and Efficient Public Investment Systems? | Inter-American Development Bank | English French Spanish | Open | Experiential Learning | In this session, we will focus on a practical case to show how technology can enhance the transparency and accountability of public projects: the MapaInversiones initiative. MapaInversiones is an IDB regional initiative aimed at developing high-impact platforms in Latin America and the Caribbean to visualize real-time data about public investment projects. MapaInversiones platforms have already been launched in Costa Rica, Paraguay, Peru, and Colombia, and are being developed in Argentina, Jamaica and the Bahamas. More concretely, we will invite participants and attendants to the session to play a game in order to showcase how the platform presents information in a simple and visual format that: 1. Allows citizens and civil society to monitor where and how public investment projects are being implemented, and how they can give feedback about those projects 2. Provides government agencies with quality information to take informed decisions and improve the efficiency of projects | MODERATOR 1. Nicolás Dassen, Modernization of the State Senior Specialist, Inter-American Development Bank, Argentina 2. Alejandro Baron Goiriena, MapaInversiones Coordinator, Inter-American Development Bank, United States SPEAKERS 1. Ania Calderón, Executive Director, Open Data Charter, Mexico 2. Pedro Uribe, Director de Gobierno para Latinoamerica y el Caribe, Microsoft, United States 3. Celia Urbieta, General Director of Open Government, Ministry of Technical Planning for Economic and Social Development, Paraguay |
97 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | #CivicTechTalks: On Closing the Feedback Loop and Bridging Accountability Gaps | 1. Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Government of the Philippines 2. Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Government of the Philippines 3. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Philippines | English French | Participation | Town Hall | In this modern day and age, various public sector institutions and organizations across the globe have decided to leverage on digital platforms and tools in monitoring programs and engaging citizens for better and more efficient delivery of public services. In this session, we will take a look at how governments, civil society, and development partners have supported the development and implementation of civic technology projects designed to better engage citizens in governance, and whether these efforts have resulted or not in improving the way that business is done in government, especially in delivering quality public goods and services. The expected outcome of the discussion are documentation of initial gains from implementing civic technology projects, and best practices and actionable recommendations on how technology can be best leveraged in policy-making, demanding better services, monitoring government performance, gauging citizens satisfaction, and holding governments accountable, which other interested stakeholders can replicate, adopt, and/or build on. | FACILITATOR Marianne Fabian, OGP Point of Contact, Philippines MODERATOR Regev Ben Jacob, Inclusive Governance Specialist and Gender Equality in Public Administration Initiative Coordinator, United Nations Development Programme, Philippines SPEAKERS 1. Cristina Clasara, Director, Department of Budget and Management, Philippines 2. Udi Glass, External Relations and Special Projects Manager, Prime Minister’s Office, Israel 3. Akmad Usman, Director, Department of Budget and Management, Philippines 4. Judith Ifeoma Onyebuchi, Program Director for Procurement Governance, Public Private Development Center, Nigeria 6. James Cottrell, Director of Ancillary Services, Holland & Knight LLP, United States |
98 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | Local Matters! Where Open Contracting Results Matter Most to People | 1. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) 2. Africa Freedom of Information Centre (AFIC) 3. Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI) 4. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 5. Young Innovations (YI) 6. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) | English French Spanish | Participation | Knowledge Café | It is the local level where Open Government reforms, like Open Contracting (OC), translate most directly into tangible results that matter to people. While local initiatives are emerging around the globe, they need a community of practice to address challenges and make reforms to stick. This workshop will bring together global champions and pioneers from government, civil society and the private sector who work on local OC initiatives to: 1. Share and learn from initial successes 2. Understand challenges and needs of practitioners 3. Gather feedback and questions from the OGP community 4. Initiate a community of practice to advance ambitious local OC initiatives We will kick off with short inspirational inputs from practitioners on initial successes and challenges We will then split into groups to elaborate key challenges and opportunities on different aspects of local OC initiatives. We will conclude by gauging interest and discussing next steps of LOCI and explore collaborations. The workshop results will inform the design of needs assessments, research and advocacy approaches of a new global program for LOCI. We invite others to join us in advancing local OC initiatives. | MODERATOR Stephanie Muchai, Program Manager, Hivos East Africa, Kenya SPEAKERS 1. Kivutha Kibwana, Governor, Makueni County, Kenya 2. Hope Muli, Africa Regional Project Manager for Open Contracting, Hivos, Kenya 3. Joaquin Nicolas Caprarulo, Democratic Institutions Coordinatior, Asociación Civil por la Igualdad y la Justicia, Argentina 4. Maricel Alejandra Lonati, Manager of Institutional Articulation, City of Buenos Aires, Argentina 5. Jennifer Bretaña, Provincial Planning and Development Coordinator, Province of South Cotabato, Philippines 6. Zyra Fastidio, Program Manager, European Chamber of Commerce, Philippines 7. Stéphane Guidoin, Acting Director of Urban Innovation Lab, City of Montreal, Canada 8. Jean-Noé Landry, Executive Director, Open North, Canada |
99 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | Artificial Intelligence and Policy Foresight: Lessons Learned and Future Directions | 1. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) 2. Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship (BII+E) | English French | Impact | Knowledge Café | This session will introduce participants to the AI Policy Labs series of public policy foresight workshops conducted across Canada by CIFAR and the Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. After a brief context-setting introduction, participants will experience a shortened version of the workshop focused on a single case study. They will move through a warm-up activity, assessment of future impacts of the technology, and explore potential policy interventions. Finally, the audience will the have opportunity to provide feedback and recommendations that will inform how the Policy Labs series can be further developed in its next stage. | FACILITATORS 1. Brent Barron, Public Policy Director, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Canada 2. Gaga Boskovic, Public Policy Associate, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Canada 3. Sarah Villeneuve, Policy Analyst, Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Canada 4. Meghan Hellstern, Senior Projects Officer, Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Canada |
100 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | National Security Transparency: Expert Perspectives | Public Safety Canada | English French | Open | Panel | This panel will provide an opportunity to reflect on the ways that national security and intelligence transparency can develop in the future, and the role that government and/or civil society should have in this process. Topics can include digital privacy, surveillance issues, cybersecurity laws, the fight against fake news, access to classified information, and more – i.e. key items of interest and importance within a national security and/or intelligence context. | MODERATOR Aaron Shull, Managing Director & General Counsel, Centre for International Governance Innovation, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Christopher Parsons, Research Associate at Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Polic & Managing Director, Telecom Transparency Project, Canada 2. Wesley Wark, Visiting Professor at Centre for International Policy Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada 3. Veronica Kitchen, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Waterloo, Canada 4. Leah West, Lecturer, University of Toronto, Canada |
101 | Friday, May 31, 15:10 - 16:30 | ||||||||
102 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | Fostering the Accomplishment of the 2030 Agenda from the Bottom Up: Open Government as a Strategy to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals at Local Level | 1. United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) 2. Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation (SCVO) | English French Spanish | Open | Fishbowl | Open Government provides a favorable framework to advance in the achievement of the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), since it implies a new form of governance that favors transparency and access to public information, promotes the traceability of political decisions, involves citizens in the cycle of public policies and encourages joint work between citizens and public administrations. To advance in this ambitious agenda, an approach where dialogue and complementary actions between the public sector and civil society are constant, constructive and regular should be promoted. Bearing in mind that the local sphere is the closest to citizens, local and regional governments are natural spaces for the joint development of the Open Government Agenda as the driving force of the 2030 Agenda. The session will foster a dialogue between representatives of local and regional governments and civil society on open government as a driver to advance on the achievement of the SDGs at local level presenting different experiences from different places of the world and showcasing collaboration among local actors to deliver the agenda under the open Government Principles. | FACILITATORS Paul Bradley, Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation, Scotland SPEAKERS 1. Juana López Pagán, Director of International Affairs and European Projects, Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces, Spain 2. Nicolás Martín, Executive Director, Corporacion Somos Más, Colombia 3. Maricel Alejandra Lonati, Manager of Institutional Articulation, City of Buenos Aires, Argentina 4. Jean-Noé Landry, Executive Director, Open North, Canada 5. Solomon Kusi Ampofo, Program Coordinator, Friends of the Nation, Ghana 6. Patricia Sarenas, Chair of the Board of Trustees, Mindanao Coalition of Development NGO Networks, Philippines |
103 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | YOUth Knows Best: A Creative Space on Youth Leadership and the Future of OGP | 1. Accountability Lab 2. Restless Development | English French | Inclusion | Lightning Talks | Imagine the leading young voices of open government pitching new ideas. Imagine live interactive voting for the most creative approaches- to be taken forward after the Summit. Imagine "Shark-Tank" crossed with OGP! This session has all of this and more- with a focus on innovative, youth-led ideas for open government from around the world. The objective is to draw on the creativity of the new generation on these issues and create conversations around where, how and why these might work. The session will be highly interactive- with youth participants from across civil society, business and government pitching their new ideas, with each followed by 5 minutes of Q & A and discussion. Attendees will vote for their favourites through a live interactive voting system; and Accountability Lab and Restless Development will work with the winners to take their ideas forward after the Summit. If you want to understand the next generation in open government thinking and practice- this is the session for you. | FACILITATORS 1. Blair Glencorse, Executive Director, Accountability Lab, Pakistan 2. Freya Seath, Global Advocacy Manager, Restless Development, Croatia |
104 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | Culture Hacking for Open Government: How to Use Art, Film, and Pop Culture to Up Our Impact | Reboot | English French | Impact | Panel | For open government to realize its potential, there needs to be greater public understanding of what it is, how it works, and why it matters. This session will focus on how to issues of transparent, paticipatory, and accountable governance in public dialogue by using art and culture. A panel of makers, strategists, and funders of notable works on democracy and social justice will discuss: 1. When and how to use cultural approaches, whether as part of existing initiatives or as standalone efforts 2. Pros and cons of different mediums, including film, art, and other media 3. How to translate wonky concepts into compelling popular narrative 4. How to work with artists, mediamakers, and cultural institutions—both process guidelines and practical tips The session will close by sharing projects that presenters are currently developing, and inviting input from attendees. In this way, we hope to serve as a networking / matchmaking mechanism, to foster great collaboration between the open government community and culture-shapers. | MODERATOR Panthea Lee, Principal, Reboot, United States SPEAKERS 1. Sarah Corbett, Founder, Craftivist Collective, United Kingdom 2. Richard Pietro, Founder, Open Toronto, Canada 3. Mel Flanagan, Founder, Nook Studios, Australia 4. Amahl Hazelton, Strategy & Development for Urban Spaces, Moment Factory, Canada |
105 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | Expanding the Use of Citizen Assemblies and Panels at the National, Regional, and Local Levels | Mass LBP | English French | Participation | Challenge Clinic | Around the world, governments are turning to long-form deliberative processes like Citizens’ Assemblies, Reference Panels, and Citizens’ Juries to decide important matters of public policy. In Madrid, randomly selected residents now play a role in helping to shape their City Council’s agenda, and to review proposals from the online platform Decide Madrid. In Ireland, Citizens’ Assemblies have broken constitutional deadlocks and guided parliamentarians through a national debate on climate change and reproductive choice. In Canada, more than 1,500 randomly selected residents have served on dozens of Reference Panels advising governments on a range of policy issues from digital privacy, to transportation investment, to cancer care. New deliberative strategies are helping to turn the populist tide by working alongside elected bodies to restore confidence and legitimacy. This session will examine the future of democracy and what other jurisdictions can learn as Canada, Ireland, and Spain develop a more inclusive approach to public governance. | MODERATOR Peter MacLeod, Principal, MASS LBP, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Claudia Chwalisz, Open Government Unit, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Canada 2. Jane Suiter, Associate Professor, Dublin City University, Ireland 3. Teele Pehk, Project Lead, Open Knowledge Estonia, Estonia |
106 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | État du PGO en Afrique | Communauté d'Afrique Francophone des Données Ouvertes (CAFDO) | English French | Participation | Town Hall | L'objectif est de faire un tour d'horizon des pays d'Afrique pour faire point sur l'état d'avancement/difficultés rencontrées dans des pays membres du PGO et la situation des pays non membres. Discuter des stratégies à mettre en place pour améliorer la mise en oeuvre des engagements dans les pays membres et amener les pays non membres à adhérer. 1. Des hauts représentants de pays d’Afrique membres du PGO vont partager leurs expériences (échecs et réussites) - Suivi de Questions/Réponses 2. Les hauts représentants des pays d’Afrique non membres vont partager les difficultés d'adhésion (d'ordre politique, financière ou technologique)- Suivi de Questions/Réponses 3. Les panélistes reviennent pour faire des propositions de stratégie d'amélioration ou d'adhésion - Suivi de Questions/Réponses et propositions des participants 4. Si la participation à distance est possible nous partagerons le lien de connexion dans les groupes de discussions 5. Un hashtag sera crée #CAFDOOGP19 | MODERATOR Charlie Ngounou, President, AfroLeadership, Cameroon SPEAKERS 1. Jacques Sosthène Dingara, Permanent Secretary of Administrative Reform, Ministry of Civil Service, Burkina Faso 2. Julie Abrivard, Agence Française de Développement Médias - CFI, France 3. Chantal Angoua, OGP Point of Contact, Côte d’Ivoire 4. Aicha Karrafi, President, Association Tunisienne de Gouvernance Locale, Tunisia |
107 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | Open Washing: Who Makes It Happen and Can We Stop It? | 1. Open Knowledge Foundation 2. Datactivist | English French | Open | Knowledge Café | This session aims to better understand the processes behind open washing - when a process, product or data is called “open” responding to a growing desire and commitments to more transparency, accountability, etc. but it isn’t actually open We have identified projects and even the use of OGP as part of open washing in different contexts and with different governments, where governments commit to OGP, build action plans and, on the surface collaborate with civil society on one hand but restrict participation and freedom on the other. The world cafe - facilitated in English, French, and Spanish - will discuss four main questions: 1. How does a particular context encourage or discourage open washing? 2. How does openness serve, or not serve, non-technical communities? 3. How is a lack of openness tied to culture? 4. What is our role as a civil society organization/infomediary or government to tackle open washing? We plan to extend the conversation into lessons and possible actions that can prevent and tackle open washing in different contexts. | FACILITATORS 1. Cécile Le Guen, Senior Consultant, Datactivist, France 2. Ana Brandusescu, Independent Data Consultant, Canada 3. Oscar Montiel, International Community Coordinator, Open Knowledge International, Mexico |
108 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | Open Government and Women's Rights: Synergies and Opportunities to Advance Both Agendas | Equal Measures 2030 | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Lightning Talks | Using the early findings from its Feminist Open Government research project and touching on the soon to be launched SDG Gender Index, Equal Measures 2030 will make a case for why supporting women's rights and women's voices is good for open government initiatives, and equally how open government approaches can advance gender equality. Utilizing a lightning talk format, EM2030 will convene speakers from across its network - including representatives from its partner organisations in Indonesia and Kenya - to share approaches and lessons learned on both how open government approaches can help to strengthen women's rights and how engaging women's rights organisations can help to advance open government objectives. Speaking to its experience in working with women's rights organisations on data-driven advocacy, EM2030 will share the early findings of their research on Feminist Open Government, provide early insights into the results of its new SDG Gender Index, and share stories of impact on social accountability and budget influencing work. | MODERATOR Allison Merchant, Senior Gender Advisor, Open Government Partnership, United States SPEAKERS 1. Albert Motivans, Head of Data & Insights, Equal Measures 2030, United States 2. Anne Connell, Senior Data Adviser, Equal Measures 2030, United States 3. Justin Galatik, Project Lead, KAPAL Perempuan, Indonesia 4. Jeniffer Kavenge Mutinda, Community Resilience, GROOTS Kenya, Kenya 5. Slamet Soedarsono, Deputy Minister of National Development Planning, Indonesia 6. Abraham Korir Sing'oei, Legal Advisor, Executive Office of the Deputy President, Kenya |
109 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | Empowered Citizens: The Opportunity of the Escazú Convention to Drive Accountable Open Government for Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection, and Climate Action | 1. World Resources Institute 2. Article 19 3. Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturale (DAR) 4. Cultura Ecológica 5. Imaflora | English French Spanish | Participation | Panel | In 2018, after six years of diligent discussion and negotiation of governments and civil society, a dozen Latin American and Caribbean governments adopted the landmark legally-binding Escazu Convention to protect rights of accessing information, participation, and justice in environmental decisionmaking and protections for environmental defenders. In this session, several of the civil society leaders who helped create the convention will discuss how to ensure its ratification and what it can mean for protecting communities rights to sustainable development and a healthy environment. Leaders from Peru, Brazil, and Mexico will illustrate what Escazu means for forest protection, extractive industry governance, and climate action. Participants from LAC countries will learn the steps they can take to urge their countries to sign or ratify the Convention and non-LAC members will learn how they can support these efforts. | MODERATOR Jesse Worker, Associate, World Resources International, United States SPEAKERS 1. Aída Gamboa, Specialist, Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, Peru 2. Tomas Severino, Specialist, Cultura Ecologica, México 3. Júlia Rocha, Project Advisor for Access to Information, Article 19 Brazil, Brazil 4. Marcelo de Medeiros, Public Policy Coordinator, Imaflora, Brazil |
110 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | First Nations Data Sovereignty | First Nations Information Governance Centre (FNIGC) | English French | Inclusion | Experiential Learning | A conversation around how First Nations govern their data using the principles of openness. | MODERATOR Jonathan Dewar, Executive Director, First Nations Information Governance Centre SPEAKERS 1. Gwen Phillips, Board Member, First Nations Information Governance Centre, Canada 2. Bonnie Healy, Executive Director, Alberta First Nations Information Governance Centre, Canada 3. Donna Cormack, Member, Te Mana Raraunga – Māori Data Sovereignty Network, New Zealand |
111 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | Extractive Company Payment Disclosures: Increasing Openness and Accountability for How Resource Revenues Are Spent | 1. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) | English French Spanish | Impact | Knowledge Café | Since its establishment in 2002, one of PWYP’s greatest achievements has been the campaign for mandatory disclosures legislation – laws requiring oil, gas and mining companies to publish their project-level payments to governments around the world. The data becoming available through legislation in Canada, EU, Norway, and Ukraine has the potential to be transformative. Today, this data enables citizens to hold their governments and companies to account for how their natural resources are managed, and to demand more accountability for how resource revenues are spent. This session will explore examples of how this data is being used to increase openness and accountability for how resource revenues are spent. Through this session, participants will understand more about this data and, through examples, explore how this could apply to their work. If you are interested to learn more about how disclosures can increase openness and accountability, this is a great session to meet leading advocates working on these issues, and to better understand the challenges and opportunities. | FACILITATOR Emily Nickerson, Director, Publish What You Pay Canada, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Jennifer Johnson, Senior Extractive Sector Transparency Measures Act Advisor, Natural Resources Canada, Canada 2. Anne Chinweze, Country Program Officer, Natural Resource Governance Initiative, Nigeria 3. Merian Mani, Board Member, Bantay Kita, Philippines 4. Maryati Abdullah, OGP Envoy & Director, Publish What You Pay Indonesia, Indonesia 5. Ben Chalmers, Senior Vice President, Mining Association of Canada, Canada 6. Isabel Munilla, Policy Lead for Extractive Industries Transparency, Oxfam America, United States 7. Kady Seguin, Interim Technical Director, IMPACT, Canada |
112 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | The Evolution and Future Direction of the Open Data and Geospatial Information and Technology | Natural Resources Canada | English French | Open | Panel | A look into how geospatial data transforms the way we do business and make important decisions everyday. | MODERATOR Prashant Shukle, Director General of the Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation, Natural Resources Canada, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Jonathan Nuefeld, Chief Executive Officer, TecTerra, Canada 2. Andrew Davidson, Manager of Earth Observation, Agriculture, and Agrifood Canada, Canada 3. Harsh Sabikhi, Country Manager, GitHub Canada, Canada 4. Alice Born, Director of Statistical Geomatics Centre, Analytical Studies, Methodology and Statistical Infrastructure Field, Statistics Canada, Canada 5. Tracey Lauriault, Assistant Professor of Critical Media and Big Data at the School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University, Canada |
113 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | Oversight and Review Bodies in the Canadian National Security Landscape | Public Safety Canada | English French | Open | Panel | This session will provide an opportunity to discuss the current and evolving landscape of national security oversight within Canada, as well as the importance of national security oversight and review bodies in enhancing transparency, accountability, and public trust in national security institutions. Issues discussed may include: 1. Charter rights, the protection of personal information, privacy, and addressing current issues 2. A changing digital world and emergent digital life: how do we deal with the reality of Meta Data and Big Data 3. The role, capacity, and challenges for national security review bodies: limits, gaps, impacts and needs 4. The Right to Know: Public education, citizen empowerment, and awareness of national security issues | MODERATOR Tim Sebastian: Host of 'Conflict Zone' and 'The New Arab Debates', United Kingdom SPEAKERS 1. David McGuinty, Member of Parliament & Chair, National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, Canada 2. Daniel Therrien, Privacy Commissioner, Canada 3. Pierre Blais, Chair, Security and Intelligence Review Committee, Canada 4. Mary Francoli, OGP IRM International Experts Panel Member & Associate Dean of Faculty of Public Affairs, Carleton University, Canada |
114 | Friday, May 31, 16:40 - 18:00 | ||||||||
115 | Friday May 31 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | Closing Ceremony | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | English French Spanish | Open | Panel | Closing ceremony of OGP Global Summit 2019 | MODERATOR Joyce Murray, Minister of Digital Government & President of the Treasury Board, Canada SPEAKERS 1. Jean Lebel, President, International Development Research Centre, Canada 2. Rudi Borrmann, Undersecretary for Public Innovation and Open Government, Ministry of Modernization, Argentina 3. Robin Hodess, Incoming Civil Society Co-Chair, OGP Steering Committee & Director of Governance and Transparency, The B Team, United States 4. Heidi Marina Canzobre, Director, Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres, Argentina 5. Ian Shugart, Clerk, Privy Council's Office, Canada 6. Jaimie Boyd, Director of Open Government, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada 7. Joe Powell, Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Open Government Partnership, United Kingdom 8. Francis Bilodeau, Assistant Deputy Minister for Policy and Service, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Canada |
1 | COUNTA of | |
---|---|---|
2 | 0 | |
3 | 1. Accountability Lab 2. Restless Development | 1 |
4 | 1. Africa Network For Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ) 2. MacArthur Foundation | 1 |
5 | 1. Agencia de Gobierno Electrónico y Sociedad de la Información y del Conocimiento (AGESIC) de Uruguay 2. Instituto Nacional de Transparencia, Acceso a la Información y Protección de Datos Personales (INAI) de Mexico | 1 |
6 | 1. Association for Election and Democracy (Perludem) 2. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) | 1 |
7 | 1. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) 2. Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship (BII+E) | 1 |
8 | 1. Canadians for Tax Fairness 2. Transparency International (TI) Canada 3. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada | 1 |
9 | 1. CARE International 2. Oxfam International 3. Kaduna State | 1 |
10 | 1. City of Austin 2. City of São Paulo 3. Government of Scotland 4. Basque Country 5. City of Sekondi-Takoradi | 1 |
11 | 1. Converlens 2. United Kingdom Office for Artificial Intelligence 3. MindBridge Analytics 4. City of Edmonton | 1 |
12 | 1. CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative 2. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | 1 |
13 | 1. DATA Uruguay 2. Sunlight Foundation 3. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 4. BetaNYC | 1 |
14 | 1. Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Government of the Philippines 2. Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Government of the Philippines 3. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Philippines | 1 |
15 | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | 1 |
16 | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Tecnologico de Monterrey | 1 |
17 | 1. Extractive Industries for Transparency Initiative (EITI) 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) 3. Oxfam America 4. Natural Resource Governance Initiative (NRGI) 5. Development Gateway 6. Global Affairs Canada | 1 |
18 | 1. Government of Canada 2. Government of France 3. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | 1 |
19 | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | 4 |
20 | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 3. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | 1 |
21 | 1. Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society 2. Cívica Digital 3. Internews | 1 |
22 | 1. Heritage Canada 2. Global Affairs Canada 3. Privy Council Office of Canada | 1 |
23 | 1. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) 2. Africa Freedom of Information Centre (AFIC) 3. Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI) 4. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 5. Young Innovations (YI) 6. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) | 1 |
24 | 1. Indonesian Parliamentary Center (IPC) 2. Article 19 Mexico and Central America | 1 |
25 | 1. International Republican Institute (IRI) 2. Africtivistes | 1 |
26 | 1. Justice Canada 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 3. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 4. Task Force on Justice - Pathfinders for Peaceful, Just and Inclusive Societies 5. Ministry of Justice of Argentina | 1 |
27 | 1. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) 2. Transparency International Health Initiative (TI-HI) | 1 |
28 | 1. Open Data Charter (ODC) 2. SocialTIC | 1 |
29 | 1. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | 1 |
30 | 1. Open Knowledge Foundation 2. Datactivist | 1 |
31 | 1. Open North 2. Crude Accountability | 1 |
32 | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. National Democratic Institute (NDI) | 1 |
33 | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. ParlAmericas | 1 |
34 | 1. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 2. Namati 3. Justice for All | 1 |
35 | 1. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 2. Statistics Canada | 1 |
36 | 1. Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) 2. Transparency International (TI) | 1 |
37 | 1. Prime Minister's Office of the Republic of Armenia 2. Secretariat-General of the Government of Romania | 1 |
38 | 1. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) | 1 |
39 | 1. Regional School of Public Administration (ReSPA) 2. OGP IRM Independent Researcher | 1 |
40 | 1. Results for Development (R4D) 2. Wahana Visi Indonesia (WVI) | 1 |
41 | 1. State of Open Data 2. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) | 1 |
42 | 1. Tanzania Media Foundation (TMF) 2. Hivos | 1 |
43 | 1. The Engine Room 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Indonesia 3. Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) 4. Transparency International (TI) Australia | 1 |
44 | 1. Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | 1 |
45 | 1. Twaweza 2. K-Monitor 3. ePaństwo Foundation | 1 |
46 | 1. United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) 2. Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation (SCVO) | 1 |
47 | 1. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) 2. Centre for Law and Democracy (CLD) | 1 |
48 | 1. World Resources Institute 2. Article 19 3. Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturale (DAR) 4. Cultura Ecológica 5. Imaflora | 1 |
49 | 1. World Resources Institute (WRI) 2. Fundación Avina 3. Water Integrity Network (WIN) 4. Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) | 1 |
50 | 1. World Wide Web Foundation 2. International Development Research Centre (IDRC) 3. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) 4. The Carter Center | 1 |
51 | Assemblée Nationale France | 1 |
52 | Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business (CCAB) | 1 |
53 | Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA) | 1 |
54 | Communauté d'Afrique Francophone des Données Ouvertes (CAFDO) | 1 |
55 | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Government of the United Kingdom | 2 |
56 | Environment and Climate Change Canada | 1 |
57 | Equal Measures 2030 | 1 |
58 | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (EU FRA) | 1 |
59 | First Nations Information Governance Centre (FNIGC) | 1 |
60 | German Federal Chancellery | 1 |
61 | Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency (GIFT) | 1 |
62 | Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | 1 |
63 | Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) | 1 |
64 | Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada | 1 |
65 | Inter-American Development Bank | 1 |
66 | International Budget Partnership (IBP) | 1 |
67 | International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) | 1 |
68 | Mass LBP | 1 |
69 | Natural Resources Canada | 1 |
70 | Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada | 1 |
71 | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | 10 |
72 | Open Heroines | 1 |
73 | Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | 1 |
74 | Open North | 1 |
75 | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | 1 |
76 | Organizer(s) | 1 |
77 | OS City | 1 |
78 | Participants of the Indigenous Gathering | 1 |
79 | Public Safety Canada | 4 |
80 | Reboot | 2 |
81 | The B Team | 1 |
82 | The Data Nutrition Project | 1 |
83 | Transparency International (TI) | 1 |
84 | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | 2 |
85 | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS) | 1 |
86 | Grand Total | 101 |
1 | COUNTA of | |
---|---|---|
2 | 0 | |
3 | Impact | 26 |
4 | Inclusion | 24 |
5 | Open | 28 |
6 | Participation | 22 |
7 | Theme | 1 |
8 | Grand Total | 101 |
1 | COUNTA of | |
---|---|---|
2 | 0 | |
3 | Challenge Clinic | 2 |
4 | Experiential Learning | 2 |
5 | Fishbowl | 15 |
6 | Format | 1 |
7 | Knowledge Café | 12 |
8 | Lightning Talks | 7 |
9 | Panel | 46 |
10 | Town Hall | 3 |
11 | Workshop | 13 |
12 | Grand Total | 101 |
1 | |||||
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2 | For more details, visit tinyurl.com/OGPSummit2019 | ||||
3 | Schedule | Temps | Room | Salle | Title | Titre | Theme | Thème | Organizer | Organisateur |
4 | Wednesday, May 29 | Mercredi, 29 Mai, 18:00 - 20:00 | ||||
5 | May 29 / 29 Mai 18:00 - 20:00 | Canada Hall | Opening Ceremony | Cérémonie d’ouverture | Open / Ouvert | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership |
6 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 09:00 - 10:20 | ||||
7 | May 30 / 30 Mai 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Threats to Democracy | Séance plénière sur la participation | Participation | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership |
8 | Thursday | Jeudi, 30 Mai, May 30, 10:30 - 11:50 | ||||
9 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | Parliaments as Partners for Ambitious Open Government Reforms | Les parlements en tant que partenaires pour des réformes ambitieuses du gouvernement ouvert | Participation | 1. Open Parliament e-Network 2. ParlAmericas |
10 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | Actions for a More Inclusive Open Government Agenda in Asia-Pacific | Actions pour un agenda du gouvernement ouvert plus inclusif dans la région Asie-Pacifique | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership |
11 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | Open Government: A Means to What End? | Le gouvernement ouvert : À quelles fins permet-il de parvenir? | Impact | 1. OECD 2. Statistics Canada |
12 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | Three Methodologies to Assess the Implementation of SDG Indicator 16.10.2 | Trois méthodologies pour évaluer la mise en œuvre de l’indicateur 16.10.2 de l’ODD | Impact | 1. UNESCO 2. Centre for Law and Democracy |
13 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | Open Government in the Digital Age: Restoring the Strength of Democratic States in a New Era | Un gouvernement ouvert à l’ère du numérique : Rétablir la force des États démocratiques en cette nouvelle ère | Open / Ouvert | German Federal Chancellery |
14 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | The Story of Open: New Tools for Impactful Open Government Journalism | Le parcours de l’ouverture : De nouveaux outils pour un journalisme percutant dans le domaine du gouvernement ouvert | Impact | Reboot |
15 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | OGP en America Latina: El Desafío de Incluir Todas Las Voces | PGO en Amérique latine : Le défi d'inclure toutes les voix | Inclusion | Open Government Partnership |
16 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | Telling Our Story: How We Explain Open Government | Raconter notre histoire : Comment nous expliquons le gouvernement ouvert | Impact | 1. Open Government Partnership 2. OECD |
17 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | Reaching the People: OGP Local Approaches to Empowering Underrepresented Communities | Communiquer avec les citoyens : Approches du PGO à l’échelle locale pour donner les moyens d’agir aux communautés sous-représentées | Inclusion | 1. City of Austin 2. City of São Paulo 3. Government of Scotland 4. Basque Country 5. City of Sekondi-Takoradi |
18 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | Blockchain Beyond the Hype: Showcasing Blockchain Applications in the Public Sector | Les chaînes de blocs au-delà du battage médiatique: présentation des applications des chaînes de bloc dans le secteur public | Impact | OS City |
19 | May 30 / 30 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | Releasing Constraints to Participation: Designing Accessible Open Government | Relâcher les obstacles à la participation: concevoir un gouvernement ouvert et accessible | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat |
20 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 12:00 - 13:20 | ||||
21 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | Innovation in Action: Tales of Public-Private Collaboration | L'innovation en action: histoires de collaboration public-privé | Impact | Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada |
22 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | OGP in the Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans: Raising Collective Ambition | Le PGO dans les pays membres d'Europe de l'Est et des Balkans: Susciter une ambition collective | Impact | Open Government Partnership |
23 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | Engaging Non-Experts in Monitoring Public Spending: Real Experiences and Results | Faire participer d’autres acteurs que des experts à la surveillance des dépenses publiques : Expériences vécues et résultats | Participation | Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency |
24 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | Empowering Socially Excluded People to Participate in Designing, Implementing, and Monitoring Policies | Permettre aux personnes socialement exclues de participer à la conception, à la mise en œuvre et au suivi des politiques | Inclusion | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights |
25 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | Health of Democracy in High-Income Countries: Restoring Trust in the Digital Era | La santé des démocraties dans les pays à revenu élevé: Restaurer la confiance à l'ère du numérique | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership |
26 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | Fostering Civic Engagement through Civic Tech and GovTech: Examples from the Field | Favoriser l’engagement civique par l’entremise de la technologie civique et de TechGov : Exemples du terrain | Participation | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Open Knowledge Foundation Germany |
27 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | Feminist Skillshare: Give and Borrow Knowledge to Make Open Government More Inclusive | Partage des compétences féministes : Faire part de ses connaissances et s’inspirer des autres pour rendre le gouvernement ouvert plus inclusif | Inclusion | Open Heroines |
28 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | Public Beneficial Ownership Registries: The Emerging Tool in the Global Fight against Corruption | Faire participer d’autres acteurs que des experts à la surveillance des dépenses publiques : Expériences vécues et résultats | Open / Ouvert | 1. Canadians for Tax Fairness 2. Transparency International Canada 3. Publish What You Pay Canada |
29 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | Collective Actions to Eradicate Online Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content | Actions collectives pour éradiquer les contenus terroristes et extrémistes violents sur l'internet | Open / Ouvert | 1. Government of Canada 2. Government of France 3. Open Government Partnership |
30 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | Building Trust and Better Infrastructure: Best Methods to Engage Ctizens and Have Lasting Impact | Bâtir la confiance et de meilleures infrastructures : Les meilleures méthodes pour faire participer les citoyens et avoir un impact durable | Participation | 1. CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative 2. Hivos |
31 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | Breaking Barriers: Achieving Sustainable, Transparent, and Efficient Outcomes with Artificial Intelligence | Éliminer les obstacles : Atteindre des résultats durables, transparents et efficaces grâce à l'intelligence artificielle | Impact | 1. Converlens 2. United Kingdom Office for Artificial Intelligence 3. MindBridge Analytics 4. City of Edmonton |
32 | May 30 / 30 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | Opening Justice through Access to Justice | Ouvrir la justice par l’accès à la justice | Inclusion | 1. Justice Canada 2. OECD 3. Open Society Justice Initiative 4. Task Force on Justice 5. Ministry of Justice of Argentina |
33 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 13:40 - 15:00 | ||||
34 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | Walking the Extra Mile: Pushing the Boundaries of Open Government Reforms | Faire un effort supplémentaire : Repousser les limites des réformes du gouvernement ouvert | Open / Ouvert | OECD |
35 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | Carpe Diem! Civic Space for All! | Carpe Diem! L'espace civique pour tous! | Participation | International Center for Not-for-Profit Law |
36 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | Fighting Fake News with New Approaches | Combattre les fausses nouvelles avec de nouvelles approches | Open / Ouvert | Assemblée Nationale France |
37 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | Making Public Procurement 10 Times Better: The Long & Winding Road to Systemic Impact and Great Services to Citizens | Améliorer les processus d’approvisionnement : La longue et sinueuse route menant à l’impact systémique et à l’excellence des services aux citoyens | Impact | 1. Open Contracting Partnership 2. Transparency International Health Initiative |
38 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | Taking Advantage of Open Government: Fostering Political Participation, Innovation, Transparency, and Civic Participation | Tirer parti du gouvernement ouvert : Favoriser la participation politique, l’innovation, la transparence et la participation civique | Participation | 1. Perludem 2. International IDEA |
39 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | Using Freedom of Information, Citizen Engagement, and Digital Tools to Open Up Decision Making | Utiliser la liberté d’information, la mobilisation des citoyens et les outils numériques pour ouvrir la prise de décision | Impact | Open Knowledge Foundation Germany |
40 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | Unpacking the Toolkit of Data-Driven Approaches for Promoting Civic Participation in Decision-Making | Déballer la boîte à outils d’approches axées sur les données pour promouvoir la participation citoyenne à la prise de décision | Participation | 1. Open North 2. Crude Accountability |
41 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | Impact, Opportunities, and Challenges for Open Government: Creating and Implementing Co-Creation Commitments | Impact, possibilités et défis pour un gouvernement ouvert : Créer et mettre en œuvre des engagements de cocréation | Impact | 1. AGESIC Uruguay 2. INAI Mexico |
42 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | Making Open Government Work at the Local Level through Strategic Intergovernmental Collaboration: Pilots, Practices, and Prospects | Faire fonctionner le gouvernement ouvert à l’échelle locale grâce à la collaboration stratégique intergouvernementale : projets pilotes, pratiques et perspectives | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat |
43 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | Open Government Commitments for Accountable and Gender-Responsive Natural Resource Governance | Engagements du gouvernement ouvert pour une gouvernance des ressources naturelles responsable et respectueuse du genrea | Inclusion | 1. Extractive Industries for Transparency Initiative 2. Publish What You Pay 3. Oxfam America 4. Natural Resource Governance Initiative 5. Development Gateway 6. Global Affairs Canada |
44 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | Machine Learning for Public Good: Exploring Opportunities, Minimizing Risks | L'apprentissage automatique pour le bien public: explorer les opportunités, minimiser les risques | Open / Ouvert | 1. Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society 2. Cívica Digital 3. Internews |
45 | May 30 / 30 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) and Diversity in National Security: Can We Ever Be "Bias-Free"? | L’analyse comparative entre les sexes plus (ACS+) et la diversité en matière de sécurité nationale: Pouvons-nous vraiment être "sans préjugés"? | Inclusion | Public Safety Canada |
46 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 15:10 - 16:30 | ||||
47 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | Entrenching Open Government Principles, Culture, and Practices | L’enracinement des principes, de la culture et des pratiques d’un gouvernement ouvert. | Impact | Open North |
48 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | Peer-Learning for Effective Co-Creation: How Does Participation Work? | Apprentissage par les pairs pour la cocréation efficace: Comment ça marche la participation | Impact | Open Government Partnership |
49 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | Highlights, Lessons, and Updates from the Multi-Donor Trust Fund | Faits saillants, leçons et mises à jour du Fonds fiduciaire multidonateurs. | Impact | Open Government Partnership |
50 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | Channeling the Vocal and Provocative Youth: Designing Youth Forums to Meet OGP and SDGs Agendas | Guider la jeunesse engagée et inspirante: Concevoir des Forums jeunesse qui respectent le programme du PGO et des ODD | Inclusion | 1. Prime Minister's Office of Armenia 2. Government of Romania Secretariat-General |
51 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | Pushing Open Science Forward: Co-Creating New Ways to Unleash the Inclusiveness and Democratic Potential of Open Science | Faire avancer la science ouverte : Cocréer de nouvelles façons d’exploiter le potentiel démocratique et inclusif de la science ouverte | Open / Ouvert | Environment and Climate Change Canada |
52 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | Implementing Open Contracting and Beneficial Ownership to Combat Corruption in Challenging Contexts | Mise en œuvre de l’ODD 16+ par l'entremise de collaborations multipartites : Innovations des membres du PGO | Open / Ouvert | 1. The Engine Room 2. Publish What You Pay Indonesia 3. Natural Resource Governance Institute 4. Transparency International Australia |
53 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | How Is Gender Mainstreaming in Open Government Policies Possible? | Comment l’intégration de la dimension de genre dans les politiques du gouvernement ouvert est-elle possible? | Inclusion | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the United Kingdom |
54 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | From Transparency and Openness of Data to Effective Anti-Corruption Strategies: Comparing Lessons from the Open Parliament and Open Government Communities | De la transparence et de l’ouverture des données aux stratégies efficaces de lutte contre la corruption : Comparaison des leçons tirées du Parlement ouvert et des communautés du gouvernement ouvert | Open / Ouvert | 1. Open Parliament e-Network 2. National Democratic Institute |
55 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | Co-Creating a (Simple) Evaluation Canvas for Open Government Civic Tech | Cocréer un canevas d’évaluation (simple) pour un gouvernement ouvert/Tech Civique | Impact | 1. DATA Uruguay 2. Sunlight Foundation 3. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos 4. BetaNYC |
56 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | Implementing SDG 16+ through Multi-Stakeholder Collaborations: Innovations from OGP Members | Mise en œuvre de l’ODD 16+ par l'entremise de collaborations multipartites : Innovations des membres du PGO | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership |
57 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | How Ready Is Government for Artificial Intelligence? | Dans quelle mesure le gouvernement est-il prêt pour l'intelligence artificielle ? | Open / Ouvert | Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos |
58 | May 30 / 30 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | OGP Local: Perspectives on the Advancement of Open Local Government | PGO local : Perspectives sur les progrès d’un gouvernement ouvert local | Participation | Open Government Partnership |
59 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 16:40 - 18:00 | ||||
60 | May 30 / 30 Mai 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Break the Roles: Putting Inclusion at the Center of Open Government | Séance plénière sur l'inclusion | Inclusion | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership |
61 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 09:00 - 10:20 | ||||
62 | May 31 / 31 Mai 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | Plenary Session - Open Government in Geopolitical Perspective: What Does the Future Look Like? | Séance plénière sur l'impact | Impact | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership 3. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |
63 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 10:30 - 11:50 | ||||
64 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | National Security and Democratic Values | Sécurité nationale et valeurs démocratiques | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada |
65 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | A Survival Toolkit: Open Government in Restrictive Political Environments | Une boîte à outils de survie : Un gouvernement ouvert dans un environnement politique restrictif | Open / Ouvert | 1. Twaweza 2. K-Monitor 3. ePaństwo Foundation |
66 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | Open Government and Service Delivery: Are We Missing an Opportunity to Act? | Gouvernement ouvert et prestation des services : Manquons-nous une occasion d’agir? | Impact | 1. Regional School of Public Administration 2. OGP IRM Independent Researcher |
67 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | Open Government Innovations by Africa | Innovations du gouvernement ouvert réalisées en Afrique | Impact | Open Government Partnership |
68 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | Is Participation the Future of Governance? Leveraging OGP Commitments as a Tool for Participatory Policy Making | La participation est-elle l’avenir de la gouvernance? Tirer parti des engagements du PGO en tant qu’outil d’élaboration participative des politiques | Participation | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the United Kingdom |
69 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 207 | Storytelling for Public Contracting Reforms: Data Literacy and Informed Citizen Reporting for Inclusive Public Contracting Reforms | La narration d’histoires pour les réformes des marchés publics : L’alphabétisation des données et des citoyens informés comme vecteur de réformes pour un marché public inclusif | Inclusion | 1. Tanzania Media Foundation 2. Hivos |
70 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | Is Open Government Really Inclusive? Raising Awareness of Challenges in Accessing Information and Data for First Nations and Indigenous Women in Four Countries | Le gouvernement ouvert est-il vraiment inclusif? Sensibilisation aux défis que pose l’accès à l’information et aux données pour les Premières Nations et les femmes autochtones dans quatre pays | Inclusion | 1. Indonesian Parliamentary Center 2. Article 19 Mexico and Central America |
71 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | The Year of Justice: How OGP Can Advance Grassroots Justice Efforts to Foster Government Accountability | L’année de la justice : Comment le PGO peut-il faire progresser les efforts de la justice de base pour favoriser la responsabilisation du gouvernement? | Inclusion | 1. Open Society Justice Initiative 2. Namati 3. Justice for All |
72 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | Participatory Budgeting Beyond Box Ticking: Inclusive and Meaningful Participatory Budgeting in an Age of Inequality | La budgétisation participative au-delà de la simple vérification : Une budgétisation participative inclusive et significative à l’ère des inégalités | Impact | International Budget Partnership |
73 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | Gender and Corruption: Developing a Roadmap for Gendered Approaches to Anti-Corruption Commitments in OGP Action Plans | Genre et corruption : Élaboration d’une feuille de route pour l’application d’approches sexospécifiques aux engagements de la lutte contre la corruption dans les plans d’action du PGO | Inclusion | Transparency International |
74 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | Bias In, Bias Out: Building Better Artificial Intelligence | Aller au-delà des préjugés: Construire une meilleure intelligence artificielle | Open / Ouvert | The Data Nutrition Project |
75 | May 31 / 31 Mai 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | Economic Reconciliation through Procurement: Increasing Indigenous Participation in Canada’s Corporate and Government Supply Chains | Réconciliation économique par le biais des achats: accroître la participation des autochtones aux chaînes d'approvisionnement du Canada et des entreprises | Inclusion | Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business |
76 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 12:00 - 13:20 | ||||
77 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | Stronger Media Systems for Open Government | Des systèmes médiatiques plus forts pour un gouvernement ouvert | Open / Ouvert | Center for International Media Assistance |
78 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | Analysing the Political Economy of Gender and Open Government: Why It Matters and How to Do It | Analyse de l'économie politique du genre et du gouvernment ouvert: Pourquoi c'est important et comment le faire | Inclusion | 1. CARE International 2. Oxfam International 3. Kaduna State |
79 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | Advancing the Cycle of Justice: Journalists, Activists, Officials, and Enforcement | Faire progresser le cycle de la justice : Journalistes, militants, fonctionnaires et agents d’exécution de la loi | Participation | 1. Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project 2. Transparency International |
80 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | Pitfalls and Bright Spots: Crowdsourcing and Validating Why Social Accountability Designs Succeed and Fail | Opportunités et défis : Utiliser l’approche participative et la validation pour comprendre comment la conception en matière de responsabilité sociale réussit ou échoue | Impact | 1. Results for Development 2. Wahana Visi Indonesia |
81 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | Fostering a Democratic Digital Space | Favoriser un espace numérique démocratique | Open / Ouvert | 1. Heritage Canada 2. Global Affairs Canada 3. Privy Council Office of Canada |
82 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | Beyond Inclusion! From Inclusivity to Responsiveness in Public Procurement to Empower Women, Youth, and Underrepresented Communities | Au-delà de l’inclusion! De l’inclusion à la réactivité dans les marchés publics et donner les moyens d’agir aux femmes, aux jeunes et aux communautés sous-représentées | Inclusion | Hivos |
83 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | Openness Under Surveillance: Balancing Transparency and Privacy Measures | Ouverture sous surveillance : L’équilibre entre la transparence et les mesures de protection des renseignements personnels | Open / Ouvert | 1. Open Data Charter 2. SocialTIC |
84 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forums: Best Practices and Challenges Moving Forward | Forums multi-intervenants du PGO: Meilleures pratiques et défis à venir | Participation | 1. Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat 2. Open Government Partnership |
85 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | Agile Procurement Case Studies: How Better Government Purchasing Decisions Yield Better Citizen Outcomes | Études de cas sur l’approvisionnement agile : Comment l'amélioration du processus décisionnel pour les achats du gouvernement produit de meilleurs résultats pour les citoyens | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat |
86 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | The State of Open Data: Rebooting Open Data Interventions on the Road to 2030 | L’état des données ouvertes : Réinitialiser les interventions liées aux données ouvertes d’ici 2030 | Impact | 1. State of Open Data 2. Open Data for Development Network |
87 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | Declassification of Government Records: A Way Forward towards Improving Transparency | Déclassification des documents gouvernementaux: pistes afin d'améliorer la transparence - Séance organisée par le Commissaire à l'information du Canada | Open / Ouvert | Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada |
88 | May 31 / 31 Mai 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | The Present and Future of Public Algorithms | Le présent et l'avenir des algorithmes publics | Inclusion | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Tecnologico de Monterrey |
89 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 13:40 - 15:00 | ||||
90 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | Operationalising Inclusiveness: How Do We Make Sure That National Action Plans Are Participatory and Inclusive? | Opérationnaliser l’inclusion : Comment faire en sorte que les Plans d’action nationaux soient participatifs et inclusifs? | Inclusion | 1. World Wide Web Foundation 2. International Development Research Centre 3. Open Data for Development Network 4. The Carter Center |
91 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | Protect Speaking Out! How Censorship Laws, Internet Shutdowns, and Social Media Taxes Threaten Open Government and Economic Growth | Protéger la liberté d’expression : Comment les lois sur la censure, les interruptions de services Internet et les taxes sur les médias sociaux menacent-elles le gouvernement ouvert et la croissance économique | Participation | The B Team |
92 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | Overcoming Water Inequality: Voices of Inspiration from the Ground Up | Surmonter les inégalités dans l’accès à l’eau : Sources d’inspiration sur le terrain | Inclusion | 1. World Resources Institute 2. Fundación Avina 3. Water Integrity Network 4. Stockholm International Water Institute |
93 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | Asset Recovery in OGP: Peer-Learning on Recovery, Return, and Monitoring - Lessons from the Field | Recouvrement d’actifs au sein du PGO : Apprentissage par les pairs sur le recouvrement, le rendement et l’utilisation – Leçons apprises sur le terrain | Impact | 1. Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice 2. MacArthur Foundation |
94 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | An Indigenous Framework for Open Government That Embodies the UNDRIP and the Declaration for Mother Earth with the Aim to Achieve Meaningful Self-Government for All Indigenous Peoples | Un cadre autochtone pour un gouvernement ouvert qui incarne la DNUDPA et la Déclaration pour la Terre nourricière, dans le but de parvenir à une autonomie gouvernementale significative pour tous les peuples autochtones | Inclusion | Participants of the Indigenous Gathering |
95 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | #KnowYourGovernment: Youth Leadership and Open Government in West Africa | #KnowYourGovernment : Le leadership des jeunes et le gouvernement ouvert en Afrique de l’Ouest | Participation | 1. International Republican Institute 2. Africtivistes |
96 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | OGP’s First Flagship Report: How to Use It | Premier rapport de référence du PGO : Comment l’utiliser | Impact | Open Government Partnership |
97 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | How Can Citizen-Centered Technological Tools Generate More Open, Transparent, and Efficient Public Investment Systems? | Comment des outils technologiques axés sur les citoyens peuvent-ils générer des systèmes d’investissement public plus ouverts, transparents et efficaces? | Open / Ouvert | Inter-American Development Bank |
98 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | #CivicTechTalks: On Closing the Feedback Loop and Bridging Accountability Gaps | #CivicTechTalks : Fermeture de la boucle de rétroaction et réduction des lacunes en matière de responsabilisation | Participation | 1. Philippine Department of Budget and Management 2. Philippine Department of the Interior and Local Government 3. United Nations Development Programme |
99 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | Local Matters! Where Open Contracting Results Matter Most to People | L’échelle locale compte! Là où les résultats des contrats ouverts importent le plus pour les citoyens | Participation | 1. Hivos 2. Africa Freedom of Information Centre 3. Institute for Development of Freedom of Information 4. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos 5. Young Innovations 6. Open Contracting Partnership |
100 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | Artificial Intelligence and Policy Foresight: Lessons Learned and Future Directions | Intelligence artificielle et politique d’anticipation: Leçons apprises et orientations futures | Impact | 1. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research 2. Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship |
101 | May 31 / 31 Mai 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | National Security Transparency: Expert Perspectives | Transparence de la sécurité nationale: Avis des experts | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada |
102 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 15:10 - 16:30 | ||||
103 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | Fostering the Accomplishment of the 2030 Agenda from the Bottom Up: Open Government as a Strategy to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals at Local Level | Favoriser la réalisation du Programme 2030 à partir de la base : Le gouvernement ouvert comme stratégie pour atteindre les objectifs de développement durable à l’échelle locale | Open / Ouvert | 1. United Cities and Local Governments 2. Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation |
104 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | YOUth Knows Best: A Creative Space on Youth Leadership and the Future of OGP | Une JEUNEsse au courant : Un espace créatif sur le leadership des jeunes et l’avenir du PGO | Inclusion | 1. Accountability Lab 2. Restless Development |
105 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | Culture Hacking for Open Government: How to Use Art, Film, and Pop Culture to Up Our Impact | La culture comme vecteur pour un gouvernement ouvert : Comment utiliser l’art, le cinéma et la culture populaire pour avoir un plus grand impact | Impact | Reboot |
106 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | Expanding the Use of Citizen Assemblies and Panels at the National, Regional, and Local Levels | Accroître l’utilisation des assemblées et des comités de citoyens aux échelles nationale, régionale et locale | Participation | Mass LBP |
107 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | The State of OGP in Africa | État du PGO en Afrique | Participation | CAFDO |
108 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | Open Washing: Who Makes It Happen and Can We Stop It? | Blanchiment ouvert : qui en est responsable et comment pouvons-nous y mettre fin? | Open / Ouvert | 1. Open Knowledge Foundation 2. Datactivist |
109 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | Open Government and Women's Rights: Synergies and Opportunities to Advance Both Agendas | Gouvernement ouvert et droits des femmes : Synergies et possibilités de faire progresser les deux programmes | Inclusion | Equal Measures 2030 |
110 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | Empowered Citizens: The Opportunity of the Escazú Convention to Drive Accountable Open Government for Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection, and Climate Action | Citoyens habilités: l'opportunité de la Convention Escazú de promouvoir un gouvernement ouvert et responsable pour le développement durable, la protection de l'environnement et l'action pour le climat | Participation | 1. World Resources Institute 2. Article 19 3. Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturale 4. Cultura Ecológica 5. Imaflora |
111 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | First Nations Data Sovereignty | Souveraineté des données des Premières Nations | Inclusion | First Nations Information Governance Centre |
112 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | Extractive Company Payment Disclosures: Increasing Openness and Accountability for How Resource Revenues Are Spent | Divulgation des paiements des sociétés extractives : Accroître l’ouverture et la responsabilisation de l’utilisation des revenus tirés des ressources naturelles | Impact | Publish What You Pay |
113 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | The Evolution and Future Direction of the Open Data and Geospatial Information and Technology | L'évolution et l'orientation future des données ouvertes et de l'information et de la technologie géospatiales | Open / Ouvert | Natural Resources Canada |
114 | May 31 / 31 Mai 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | Oversight and Review Bodies in the Canadian National Security Landscape | Organismes de surveillance et d'examen dans le paysage de la sécurité nationale au Canada | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada |
115 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 16:40 - 18:00 | ||||
116 | May 31 / 31 Mai 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | Closing Ceremony | Cérémonie de clôture | Open / Ouvert | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership |
1 | ||||
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2 | For more details, visit tinyurl.com/OGPSummit2019 | |||
3 | Room | Salle | Theme | Thème | Organizer | Organisateur | Title | Titre |
4 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 09:00 - 10:20 | |||
5 | Canada Hall | Participation | Government of Canada & Open Government Partnership | Plenary Session - Threats to Democracy | Séance plénière sur la participation |
6 | Thursday | Jeudi, 30 Mai, May 30, 10:30 - 11:50 | |||
7 | Canada Hall | Participation | Open Parliament e-Network & ParlAmericas | Parliaments as Partners for Ambitious Open Government Reforms | Les parlements en tant que partenaires pour des réformes ambitieuses du gouvernement ouvert |
8 | 201 | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership | Actions for a More Inclusive Open Government Agenda in Asia-Pacific | Actions pour un agenda du gouvernement ouvert plus inclusif dans la région Asie-Pacifique |
9 | 202 | Impact | OECD & Statistics Canada | Open Government: A Means to What End? | Le gouvernement ouvert : À quelles fins permet-il de parvenir? |
10 | 205 | Impact | UNESCO & Centre for Law and Democracy | Three Methodologies to Assess the Implementation of SDG Indicator 16.10.2 | Trois méthodologies pour évaluer la mise en œuvre de l’indicateur 16.10.2 de l’ODD |
11 | 206 | Open / Ouvert | German Federal Chancellery | Open Government in the Digital Age: Restoring the Strength of Democratic States in a New Era | Un gouvernement ouvert à l’ère du numérique : Rétablir la force des États démocratiques en cette nouvelle ère |
12 | 208 | Impact | Reboot | The Story of Open: New Tools for Impactful Open Government Journalism | Le parcours de l’ouverture : De nouveaux outils pour un journalisme percutant dans le domaine du gouvernement ouvert |
13 | 210 | Inclusion | Open Government Partnership | OGP en America Latina: El Desafío de Incluir Todas Las Voces | PGO en Amérique latine : Le défi d'inclure toutes les voix |
14 | 211 | Impact | Open Government Partnership & OECD | Telling Our Story: How We Explain Open Government | Raconter notre histoire : Comment nous expliquons le gouvernement ouvert |
15 | 214 | Inclusion | City of Austin, City of São Paulo, Government of Scotland, Basque Country & City of Sekondi-Takoradi | Reaching the People: OGP Local Approaches to Empowering Underrepresented Communities | Communiquer avec les citoyens : Approches du PGO à l’échelle locale pour donner les moyens d’agir aux communautés sous-représentées |
16 | 212 | Impact | OS City | Blockchain Beyond the Hype: Showcasing Blockchain Applications in the Public Sector | Les chaînes de blocs au-delà du battage médiatique: présentation des applications des chaînes de bloc dans le secteur public |
17 | 215 | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | Releasing Constraints to Participation: Designing Accessible Open Government | Relâcher les obstacles à la participation: concevoir un gouvernement ouvert et accessible |
18 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 12:00 - 13:20 | |||
19 | Canada Hall | Inclusion | Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada | Innovation in Action: Tales of Public-Private Collaboration | L'innovation en action: histoires de collaboration public-privé |
20 | 201 | Impact | Open Government Partnership | OGP in the Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans: Raising Collective Ambition | Le PGO dans les pays membres d'Europe de l'Est et des Balkans: Susciter une ambition collective |
21 | 202 | Participation | Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency | Engaging Non-Experts in Monitoring Public Spending: Real Experiences and Results | Faire participer d’autres acteurs que des experts à la surveillance des dépenses publiques : Expériences vécues et résultats |
22 | 205 | Inclusion | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights | Empowering Socially Excluded People to Participate in Designing, Implementing, and Monitoring Policies | Permettre aux personnes socialement exclues de participer à la conception, à la mise en œuvre et au suivi des politiques |
23 | 206 | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership | Health of Democracy in High-Income Countries: Restoring Trust in the Digital Era | La santé des démocraties dans les pays à revenu élevé: Restaurer la confiance à l'ère du numérique |
24 | 207 | Participation | Etalab - French Government Digital Services & Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | Fostering Civic Engagement through Civic Tech and GovTech: Examples from the Field | Favoriser l’engagement civique par l’entremise de la technologie civique et de TechGov : Exemples du terrain |
25 | 208 | Inclusion | Open Heroines | Feminist Skillshare: Give and Borrow Knowledge to Make Open Government More Inclusive | Partage des compétences féministes : Faire part de ses connaissances et s’inspirer des autres pour rendre le gouvernement ouvert plus inclusif |
26 | 210 | Open / Ouvert | Canadians for Tax Fairness, Transparency International Canada & Publish What You Pay Canada | Public Beneficial Ownership Registries: The Emerging Tool in the Global Fight against Corruption | Faire participer d’autres acteurs que des experts à la surveillance des dépenses publiques : Expériences vécues et résultats |
27 | 211 | Open / Ouvert | Government of Canada, Government of France & Open Government Partnership | Collective Actions to Eradicate Online Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content | Actions collectives pour éradiquer les contenus terroristes et extrémistes violents sur l'internet |
28 | 214 | Participation | CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative & Hivos | Building Trust and Better Infrastructure: Best Methods to Engage Ctizens and Have Lasting Impact | Bâtir la confiance et de meilleures infrastructures : Les meilleures méthodes pour faire participer les citoyens et avoir un impact durable |
29 | 212 | Impact | Converlens, United Kingdom Office for Artificial Intelligence, MindBridge Analytics & City of Edmonton | Breaking Barriers: Achieving Sustainable, Transparent, and Efficient Outcomes with Artificial Intelligence | Éliminer les obstacles : Atteindre des résultats durables, transparents et efficaces grâce à l'intelligence artificielle |
30 | 215 | Impact | Justice Canada, OECD, Open Society Justice Initiative, Task Force on Justice & Ministry of Justice of Argentina | Opening Justice through Access to Justice | Ouvrir la justice par l’accès à la justice |
31 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 13:40 - 15:00 | |||
32 | Canada Hall | Open / Ouvert | OECD | Walking the Extra Mile: Pushing the Boundaries of Open Government Reforms | Faire un effort supplémentaire : Repousser les limites des réformes du gouvernement ouvert |
33 | 201 | Participation | International Center for Not-for-Profit Law | Carpe Diem! Civic Space for All! | Carpe Diem! L'espace civique pour tous! |
34 | 202 | Open / Ouvert | Assemblée Nationale France | Fighting Fake News with New Approaches | Combattre les fausses nouvelles avec de nouvelles approches |
35 | 205 | Impact | Open Contracting Partnership & Transparency International Health Initiative | Making Public Procurement 10 Times Better: The Long & Winding Road to Systemic Impact and Great Services to Citizens | Améliorer les processus d’approvisionnement : La longue et sinueuse route menant à l’impact systémique et à l’excellence des services aux citoyens |
36 | 206 | Participation | Perludem & International IDEA | Taking Advantage of Open Government: Fostering Political Participation, Innovation, Transparency, and Civic Participation | Tirer parti du gouvernement ouvert : Favoriser la participation politique, l’innovation, la transparence et la participation civique |
37 | 207 | Impact | Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | Using Freedom of Information, Citizen Engagement, and Digital Tools to Open Up Decision Making | Utiliser la liberté d’information, la mobilisation des citoyens et les outils numériques pour ouvrir la prise de décision |
38 | 208 | Participation | Open North & Crude Accountability | Unpacking the Toolkit of Data-Driven Approaches for Promoting Civic Participation in Decision-Making | Déballer la boîte à outils d’approches axées sur les données pour promouvoir la participation citoyenne à la prise de décision |
39 | 210 | Impact | AGESIC Uruguay & INAI Mexico | Impact, Opportunities, and Challenges for Open Government: Creating and Implementing Co-Creation Commitments | Impact, possibilités et défis pour un gouvernement ouvert : Créer et mettre en œuvre des engagements de cocréation |
40 | 211 | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | Making Open Government Work at the Local Level through Strategic Intergovernmental Collaboration: Pilots, Practices, and Prospects | Faire fonctionner le gouvernement ouvert à l’échelle locale grâce à la collaboration stratégique intergouvernementale : projets pilotes, pratiques et perspectives |
41 | 214 | Inclusion | Extractive Industries for Transparency Initiative, Publish What You Pay, Oxfam America, Natural Resource Governance Initiative, Development Gateway & Global Affairs Canada | Open Government Commitments for Accountable and Gender-Responsive Natural Resource Governance | Engagements du gouvernement ouvert pour une gouvernance des ressources naturelles responsable et respectueuse du genrea |
42 | 212 | Open / Ouvert | Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, Cívica Digital & Internews | Machine Learning for Public Good: Exploring Opportunities, Minimizing Risks | L'apprentissage automatique pour le bien public: explorer les opportunités, minimiser les risques |
43 | 215 | Inclusion | Public Safety Canada | Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) and Diversity in National Security: Can We Ever Be "Bias-Free"? | L’analyse comparative entre les sexes plus (ACS+) et la diversité en matière de sécurité nationale: Pouvons-nous vraiment être "sans préjugés"? |
44 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 15:10 - 16:30 | |||
45 | Canada Hall | Impact | Open North | Entrenching Open Government Principles, Culture, and Practices | L’enracinement des principes, de la culture et des pratiques d’un gouvernement ouvert. |
46 | 201 | Impact | Open Government Partnership | Peer-Learning for Effective Co-Creation: How Does Participation Work? | Apprentissage par les pairs pour la cocréation efficace: Comment ça marche la participation |
47 | 202 | Impact | Open Government Partnership | Highlights, Lessons, and Updates from the Multi-Donor Trust Fund | Faits saillants, leçons et mises à jour du Fonds fiduciaire multidonateurs. |
48 | 205 | Inclusion | Prime Minister's Office of Armenia & Government of Romania Secretariat-General | Channeling the Vocal and Provocative Youth: Designing Youth Forums to Meet OGP and SDGs Agendas | Guider la jeunesse engagée et inspirante: Concevoir des Forums jeunesse qui respectent le programme du PGO et des ODD |
49 | 206 | Open / Ouvert | Environment and Climate Change Canada | Pushing Open Science Forward: Co-Creating New Ways to Unleash the Inclusiveness and Democratic Potential of Open Science | Faire avancer la science ouverte : Cocréer de nouvelles façons d’exploiter le potentiel démocratique et inclusif de la science ouverte |
50 | 207 | Open / Ouvert | The Engine Room, Publish What You Pay Indonesia, Natural Resource Governance Institute & Transparency International Australia | Implementing Open Contracting and Beneficial Ownership to Combat Corruption in Challenging Contexts | Mise en œuvre de l’ODD 16+ par l'entremise de collaborations multipartites : Innovations des membres du PGO |
51 | 208 | Inclusion | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the United Kingdom | How Is Gender Mainstreaming in Open Government Policies Possible? | Comment l’intégration de la dimension de genre dans les politiques du gouvernement ouvert est-elle possible? |
52 | 210 | Open / Ouvert | Open Parliament e-Network & National Democratic Institute | From Transparency and Openness of Data to Effective Anti-Corruption Strategies: Comparing Lessons from the Open Parliament and Open Government Communities | De la transparence et de l’ouverture des données aux stratégies efficaces de lutte contre la corruption : Comparaison des leçons tirées du Parlement ouvert et des communautés du gouvernement ouvert |
53 | 211 | Impact | DATA Uruguay, Sunlight Foundation, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos & BetaNYC | Co-Creating a (Simple) Evaluation Canvas for Open Government Civic Tech | Cocréer un canevas d’évaluation (simple) pour un gouvernement ouvert/Tech Civique |
54 | 214 | Open / Ouvert | Open Government Partnership | Implementing SDG 16+ through Multi-Stakeholder Collaborations: Innovations from OGP Members | Mise en œuvre de l’ODD 16+ par l'entremise de collaborations multipartites : Innovations des membres du PGO |
55 | 212 | Open / Ouvert | Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos | How Ready Is Government for Artificial Intelligence? | Dans quelle mesure le gouvernement est-il prêt pour l'intelligence artificielle ? |
56 | 215 | Participation | Open Government Partnership | OGP Local: Perspectives on the Advancement of Open Local Government | PGO local : Perspectives sur les progrès d’un gouvernement ouvert local |
57 | Thursday, May 30 | Jeudi, 30 Mai, 16:40 - 18:00 | |||
58 | Canada Hall | Inclusion | Government of Canada & Open Government Partnership | Plenary Session - Break the Roles: Putting Inclusion at the Center of Open Government | Séance plénière sur l'inclusion |
1 | ||||
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2 | For more details, visit tinyurl.com/OGPSummit2019 | |||
3 | Room | Salle | Theme | Thème | Organizer | Organisateur | Title | Titre |
4 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 09:00 - 10:20 | |||
5 | Canada Hall | Impact | Government of Canada, Open Government Partnership & Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | Plenary Session - Open Government in Geopolitical Perspective: What Does the Future Look Like? | Séance plénière sur l'impact |
6 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 10:30 - 11:50 | |||
7 | Canada Hall | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada | National Security and Democratic Values | Sécurité nationale et valeurs démocratiques |
8 | 201 | Open / Ouvert | Twaweza, K-Monitor & ePaństwo Foundation | A Survival Toolkit: Open Government in Restrictive Political Environments | Une boîte à outils de survie : Un gouvernement ouvert dans un environnement politique restrictif |
9 | 202 | Impact | Regional School of Public Administration & OGP IRM Independent Researcher | Open Government and Service Delivery: Are We Missing an Opportunity to Act? | Gouvernement ouvert et prestation des services : Manquons-nous une occasion d’agir? |
10 | 205 | Impact | Open Government Partnership | Open Government Innovations by Africa | Innovations du gouvernement ouvert réalisées en Afrique |
11 | 206 | Participation | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the United Kingdom | Is Participation the Future of Governance? Leveraging OGP Commitments as a Tool for Participatory Policy Making | La participation est-elle l’avenir de la gouvernance? Tirer parti des engagements du PGO en tant qu’outil d’élaboration participative des politiques |
12 | 207 | Inclusion | Tanzania Media Foundation & Hivos | Storytelling for Public Contracting Reforms: Data Literacy and Informed Citizen Reporting for Inclusive Public Contracting Reforms | La narration d’histoires pour les réformes des marchés publics : L’alphabétisation des données et des citoyens informés comme vecteur de réformes pour un marché public inclusif |
13 | 208 | Inclusion | Indonesian Parliamentary Center & Article 19 Mexico and Central America | Is Open Government Really Inclusive? Raising Awareness of Challenges in Accessing Information and Data for First Nations and Indigenous Women in Four Countries | Le gouvernement ouvert est-il vraiment inclusif? Sensibilisation aux défis que pose l’accès à l’information et aux données pour les Premières Nations et les femmes autochtones dans quatre pays |
14 | 210 | Inclusion | Open Society Justice Initiative, Namati & Justice for All | The Year of Justice: How OGP Can Advance Grassroots Justice Efforts to Foster Government Accountability | L’année de la justice : Comment le PGO peut-il faire progresser les efforts de la justice de base pour favoriser la responsabilisation du gouvernement? |
15 | 211 | Impact | International Budget Partnership | Participatory Budgeting Beyond Box Ticking: Inclusive and Meaningful Participatory Budgeting in an Age of Inequality | La budgétisation participative au-delà de la simple vérification : Une budgétisation participative inclusive et significative à l’ère des inégalités |
16 | 214 | Inclusion | Transparency International | Gender and Corruption: Developing a Roadmap for Gendered Approaches to Anti-Corruption Commitments in OGP Action Plans | Genre et corruption : Élaboration d’une feuille de route pour l’application d’approches sexospécifiques aux engagements de la lutte contre la corruption dans les plans d’action du PGO |
17 | 212 | Open / Ouvert | The Data Nutrition Project | Bias In, Bias Out: Building Better Artificial Intelligence | Aller au-delà des préjugés: Construire une meilleure intelligence artificielle |
18 | 215 | Inclusion | Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business | Economic Reconciliation through Procurement: Increasing Indigenous Participation in Canada’s Corporate and Government Supply Chains | Réconciliation économique par le biais des achats: accroître la participation des autochtones aux chaînes d'approvisionnement du Canada et des entreprises |
19 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 12:00 - 13:20 | |||
20 | Canada Hall | Open / Ouvert | Center for International Media Assistance | Stronger Media Systems for Open Government | Des systèmes médiatiques plus forts pour un gouvernement ouvert |
21 | 201 | Inclusion | CARE International, Oxfam International & Kaduna State | Analysing the Political Economy of Gender and Open Government: Why It Matters and How to Do It | Analyse de l'économie politique du genre et du gouvernment ouvert: Pourquoi c'est important et comment le faire |
22 | 202 | Participation | Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project & Transparency International | Advancing the Cycle of Justice: Journalists, Activists, Officials, and Enforcement | Faire progresser le cycle de la justice : Journalistes, militants, fonctionnaires et agents d’exécution de la loi |
23 | 205 | Impact | Results for Development & Wahana Visi Indonesia | Pitfalls and Bright Spots: Crowdsourcing and Validating Why Social Accountability Designs Succeed and Fail | Opportunités et défis : Utiliser l’approche participative et la validation pour comprendre comment la conception en matière de responsabilité sociale réussit ou échoue |
24 | 206 | Open / Ouvert | Heritage Canada, Global Affairs Canada & Privy Council Office of Canada | Fostering a Democratic Digital Space | Favoriser un espace numérique démocratique |
25 | 207 | Inclusion | Hivos | Beyond Inclusion! From Inclusivity to Responsiveness in Public Procurement to Empower Women, Youth, and Underrepresented Communities | Au-delà de l’inclusion! De l’inclusion à la réactivité dans les marchés publics et donner les moyens d’agir aux femmes, aux jeunes et aux communautés sous-représentées |
26 | 208 | Open / Ouvert | Open Data Charter & SocialTIC | Openness Under Surveillance: Balancing Transparency and Privacy Measures | Ouverture sous surveillance : L’équilibre entre la transparence et les mesures de protection des renseignements personnels |
27 | 210 | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat & Open Government Partnership | OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forums: Best Practices and Challenges Moving Forward | Forums multi-intervenants du PGO: Meilleures pratiques et défis à venir |
28 | 211 | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | Agile Procurement Case Studies: How Better Government Purchasing Decisions Yield Better Citizen Outcomes | Études de cas sur l’approvisionnement agile : Comment l'amélioration du processus décisionnel pour les achats du gouvernement produit de meilleurs résultats pour les citoyens |
29 | 214 | Impact | State of Open Data & Open Data for Development Network | The State of Open Data: Rebooting Open Data Interventions on the Road to 2030 | L’état des données ouvertes : Réinitialiser les interventions liées aux données ouvertes d’ici 2030 |
30 | 212 | Open / Ouvert | Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada | Declassification of Government Records: A Way Forward towards Improving Transparency | Déclassification des documents gouvernementaux: pistes afin d'améliorer la transparence - Séance organisée par le Commissaire à l'information du Canada |
31 | 215 | Inclusion | Etalab - French Government Digital Services & Tecnlogico de Monterrey | The Present and Future of Public Algorithms | Le présent et l'avenir des algorithmes publics |
32 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 13:40 - 15:00 | |||
33 | Canada Hall | Inclusion | World Wide Web Foundation, International Development Research Centre, Open Data for Development Network & The Carter Center | Operationalising Inclusiveness: How Do We Make Sure That National Action Plans Are Participatory and Inclusive? | Opérationnaliser l’inclusion : Comment faire en sorte que les Plans d’action nationaux soient participatifs et inclusifs? |
34 | 201 | Participation | The B Team | Protect Speaking Out! How Censorship Laws, Internet Shutdowns, and Social Media Taxes Threaten Open Government and Economic Growth | Protéger la liberté d’expression : Comment les lois sur la censure, les interruptions de services Internet et les taxes sur les médias sociaux menacent-elles le gouvernement ouvert et la croissance économique |
35 | 202 | Inclusion | World Resources Institute, Fundación Avina, Water Integrity Network & Stockholm International Water Institute | Overcoming Water Inequality: Voices of Inspiration from the Ground Up | Surmonter les inégalités dans l’accès à l’eau : Sources d’inspiration sur le terrain |
36 | 205 | Impact | Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice & MacArthur Foundation | Asset Recovery in OGP: Peer-Learning on Recovery, Return, and Monitoring - Lessons from the Field | Recouvrement d’actifs au sein du PGO : Apprentissage par les pairs sur le recouvrement, le rendement et l’utilisation – Leçons apprises sur le terrain |
37 | 206 | Inclusion | Participants of the Indigenous Gathering | An Indigenous Framework for Open Government That Embodies the UNDRIP and the Declaration for Mother Earth with the Aim to Achieve Meaningful Self-Government for All Indigenous Peoples | Un cadre autochtone pour un gouvernement ouvert qui incarne la DNUDPA et la Déclaration pour la Terre nourricière, dans le but de parvenir à une autonomie gouvernementale significative pour tous les peuples autochtones |
38 | 207 | Participation | International Republican Institute & Africtivistes | #KnowYourGovernment: Youth Leadership and Open Government in West Africa | #KnowYourGovernment : Le leadership des jeunes et le gouvernement ouvert en Afrique de l’Ouest |
39 | 208 | Impact | Open Government Partnership | OGP’s First Flagship Report: How to Use It | Premier rapport de référence du PGO : Comment l’utiliser |
40 | 210 | Open / Ouvert | Inter-American Development Bank | How Can Citizen-Centered Technological Tools Generate More Open, Transparent, and Efficient Public Investment Systems? | Comment des outils technologiques axés sur les citoyens peuvent-ils générer des systèmes d’investissement public plus ouverts, transparents et efficaces? |
41 | 211 | Participation | Philippine Department of Budget and Management, Philippine Department of the Interior and Local Government & United Nations Development Programme | #CivicTechTalks: On Closing the Feedback Loop and Bridging Accountability Gaps | #CivicTechTalks : Fermeture de la boucle de rétroaction et réduction des lacunes en matière de responsabilisation |
42 | 214 | Participation | Hivos, Africa Freedom of Information Centre, Institute for Development of Freedom of Information, Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos, Young Innovations & Open Contracting Partnership | Local Matters! Where Open Contracting Results Matter Most to People | L’échelle locale compte! Là où les résultats des contrats ouverts importent le plus pour les citoyens |
43 | 212 | Impact | Canadian Institute for Advanced Research & Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship | Artificial Intelligence and Policy Foresight: Lessons Learned and Future Directions | Intelligence artificielle et politique d’anticipation: Leçons apprises et orientations futures |
44 | 215 | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada | National Security Transparency: Expert Perspectives | Transparence de la sécurité nationale: Avis des experts |
45 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 15:10 - 16:30 | |||
46 | Canada Hall | Open / Ouvert | United Cities and Local Governments & Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation | Fostering the Accomplishment of the 2030 Agenda from the Bottom Up: Open Government as a Strategy to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals at Local Level | Favoriser la réalisation du Programme 2030 à partir de la base : Le gouvernement ouvert comme stratégie pour atteindre les objectifs de développement durable à l’échelle locale |
47 | 201 | Inclusion | Accountability Lab & Restless Development | YOUth Knows Best: A Creative Space on Youth Leadership and the Future of OGP | Une JEUNEsse au courant : Un espace créatif sur le leadership des jeunes et l’avenir du PGO |
48 | 202 | Impact | Reboot | Culture Hacking for Open Government: How to Use Art, Film, and Pop Culture to Up Our Impact | La culture comme vecteur pour un gouvernement ouvert : Comment utiliser l’art, le cinéma et la culture populaire pour avoir un plus grand impact |
49 | 205 | Participation | Mass LBP | Expanding the Use of Citizen Assemblies and Panels at the National, Regional, and Local Levels | Accroître l’utilisation des assemblées et des comités de citoyens aux échelles nationale, régionale et locale |
50 | 206 | Participation | CAFDO | The State of OGP in Africa | État du PGO en Afrique |
51 | 207 | Open / Ouvert | Open Knowledge Foundation & Datactivist | Open Washing: Who Makes It Happen and Can We Stop It? | Blanchiment ouvert : qui en est responsable et comment pouvons-nous y mettre fin? |
52 | 208 | Inclusion | Equal Measures 2030 | Open Government and Women's Rights: Synergies and Opportunities to Advance Both Agendas | Gouvernement ouvert et droits des femmes : Synergies et possibilités de faire progresser les deux programmes |
53 | 210 | Participation | World Resources Institute, Article 19, Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturale, Cultura Ecológica & Imaflora | Empowered Citizens: The Opportunity of the Escazú Convention to Drive Accountable Open Government for Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection, and Climate Action | Citoyens habilités: l'opportunité de la Convention Escazú de promouvoir un gouvernement ouvert et responsable pour le développement durable, la protection de l'environnement et l'action pour le climat |
54 | 211 | Inclusion | First Nations Information Governance Centre | First Nations Data Sovereignty | Souveraineté des données des Premières Nations |
55 | 214 | Impact | Publish What You Pay | Extractive Company Payment Disclosures: Increasing Openness and Accountability for How Resource Revenues Are Spent | Divulgation des paiements des sociétés extractives : Accroître l’ouverture et la responsabilisation de l’utilisation des revenus tirés des ressources naturelles |
56 | 212 | Open / Ouvert | Natural Resources Canada | The Evolution and Future Direction of the Open Data and Geospatial Information and Technology | L'évolution et l'orientation future des données ouvertes et de l'information et de la technologie géospatiales |
57 | 215 | Open / Ouvert | Public Safety Canada | Oversight and Review Bodies in the Canadian National Security Landscape | Organismes de surveillance et d'examen dans le paysage de la sécurité nationale au Canada |
58 | Friday, May 31 | Vendredi, 31 Mai, 16:40 - 18:00 | |||
59 | Canada Hall | Open / Ouvert | Government of Canada & Open Government Partnership | Closing Ceremony | Cérémonie de clôture |
1 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Schedule | Room | Logistics | Translations | Theme | Organizer(s) | Title | Format |
3 | Wednesday, May 29, 18:00 - 20:00 | |||||||
4 | Wednesday May 29 18:00 - 20:00 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Opening Ceremony | Panel |
5 | Thursday, May 30, 09:00 - 10:20 | |||||||
6 | Thursday May 30 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Plenary Session - Threats to Democracy | Panel |
7 | Thursday, May 30, 10:30 - 11:50 | |||||||
8 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. ParlAmericas | Parliaments as Partners for Ambitious Open Government Reforms | Panel |
9 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Actions for a More Inclusive Open Government Agenda in Asia-Pacific | Fishbowl |
10 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 2. Statistics Canada | Open Government: A Means to What End? | Panel |
11 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | 1. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) 2. Centre for Law and Democracy (CLD) | Three Methodologies to Assess the Implementation of SDG Indicator 16.10.2 | Workshop |
12 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | German Federal Chancellery | Open Government in the Digital Age: Restoring the Strength of Democratic States in a New Era | Fishbowl |
13 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | Reboot | The Story of Open: New Tools for Impactful Open Government Journalism | Knowledge Café |
14 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | OGP en America Latina: El Desafío de Incluir Todas Las Voces | Panel |
15 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | Telling Our Story: How We Explain Open Government | Panel |
16 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Inclusion | 1. City of Austin 2. City of São Paulo 3. Government of Scotland 4. Basque Country 5. City of Sekondi-Takoradi | Reaching the People: OGP Local Approaches to Empowering Underrepresented Communities | Knowledge Café |
17 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | OS City | Blockchain Beyond the Hype: Showcasing Blockchain Applications in the Public Sector | Panel |
18 | Thursday May 30 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | Releasing Constraints to Participation: Designing Accessible Open Government | Panel |
19 | Thursday, May 30, 12:00 - 13:20 | |||||||
20 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Impact | Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada | Innovation in Action: Tales of Public-Private Collaboration | Panel |
21 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Impact | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | OGP in the Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans: Raising Collective Ambition | Fishbowl |
22 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency (GIFT) | Engaging Non-Experts in Monitoring Public Spending: Real Experiences and Results | Town Hall |
23 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Inclusion | European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (EU FRA) | Empowering Socially Excluded People to Participate in Designing, Implementing, and Monitoring Policies | Workshop |
24 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Health of Democracy in High-Income Countries: Restoring Trust in the Digital Era | Fishbowl |
25 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Participation | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | Fostering Civic Engagement through Civic Tech and GovTech: Examples from the Field | Panel |
26 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | Open Heroines | Feminist Skillshare: Give and Borrow Knowledge to Make Open Government More Inclusive | Workshop |
27 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Open | 1. Canadians for Tax Fairness 2. Transparency International (TI) Canada 3. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada | Public Beneficial Ownership Registries: The Emerging Tool in the Global Fight against Corruption | Panel |
28 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | 1. Government of Canada 2. Government of France 3. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Collective Actions to Eradicate Online Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content | Panel |
29 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. CoST - The Infrastructure Transparency Initiative 2. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | Building Trust and Better Infrastructure: Best Methods to Engage Ctizens and Have Lasting Impact | Lightning Talks |
30 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. Converlens 2. United Kingdom Office for Artificial Intelligence 3. MindBridge Analytics 4. City of Edmonton | Breaking Barriers: Achieving Sustainable, Transparent, and Efficient Outcomes with Artificial Intelligence | Panel |
31 | Thursday May 30 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Justice Canada 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 3. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 4. Task Force on Justice - Pathfinders for Peaceful, Just and Inclusive Societies 5. Ministry of Justice of Argentina | Opening Justice through Access to Justice | Panel |
32 | Thursday, May 30, 13:40 - 15:00 | |||||||
33 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | Walking the Extra Mile: Pushing the Boundaries of Open Government Reforms | Panel |
34 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Participation | International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) | Carpe Diem! Civic Space for All! | Fishbowl |
35 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Assemblée Nationale France | Fighting Fake News with New Approaches | Panel |
36 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | 1. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) 2. Transparency International Health Initiative (TI-HI) | Making Public Procurement 10 Times Better: The Long & Winding Road to Systemic Impact and Great Services to Citizens | Knowledge Café |
37 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Participation | 1. Association for Election and Democracy (Perludem) 2. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) | Taking Advantage of Open Government: Fostering Political Participation, Innovation, Transparency, and Civic Participation | Fishbowl |
38 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | Open Knowledge Foundation Germany | Using Freedom of Information, Citizen Engagement, and Digital Tools to Open Up Decision Making | Workshop |
39 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | 1. Open North 2. Crude Accountability | Unpacking the Toolkit of Data-Driven Approaches for Promoting Civic Participation in Decision-Making | Panel |
40 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Impact | 1. Agencia de Gobierno Electrónico y Sociedad de la Información y del Conocimiento (AGESIC) de Uruguay 2. Instituto Nacional de Transparencia, Acceso a la Información y Protección de Datos Personales (INAI) de Mexico | Impact, Opportunities, and Challenges for Open Government: Creating and Implementing Co-Creation Commitments | Panel |
41 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS) | Making Open Government Work at the Local Level through Strategic Intergovernmental Collaboration: Pilots, Practices, and Prospects | Panel |
42 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Inclusion | 1. Extractive Industries for Transparency Initiative (EITI) 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) 3. Oxfam America 4. Natural Resource Governance Initiative (NRGI) 5. Development Gateway 6. Global Affairs Canada | Open Government Commitments for Accountable and Gender-Responsive Natural Resource Governance | Knowledge Café |
43 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | 1. Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society 2. Cívica Digital 3. Internews | Machine Learning for Public Good: Exploring Opportunities, Minimizing Risks | Workshop |
44 | Thursday May 30 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | Public Safety Canada | Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) and Diversity in National Security: Can We Ever Be "Bias-Free"? | Panel |
45 | Thursday, May 30, 15:10 - 16:30 | |||||||
46 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Impact | Open North | Entrenching Open Government Principles, Culture, and Practices | Panel |
47 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Impact | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Peer-Learning for Effective Co-Creation: How Does Participation Work? | Panel |
48 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Highlights, Lessons, and Updates from the Multi-Donor Trust Fund | Panel |
49 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Prime Minister's Office of the Republic of Armenia 2. Secretariat-General of the Government of Romania | Channeling the Vocal and Provocative Youth: Designing Youth Forums to Meet OGP and SDGs Agendas | Fishbowl |
50 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | Environment and Climate Change Canada | Pushing Open Science Forward: Co-Creating New Ways to Unleash the Inclusiveness and Democratic Potential of Open Science | Fishbowl |
51 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Open | 1. The Engine Room 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Indonesia 3. Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) 4. Transparency International (TI) Australia | Implementing Open Contracting and Beneficial Ownership to Combat Corruption in Challenging Contexts | Knowledge Café |
52 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Government of the United Kingdom | How Is Gender Mainstreaming in Open Government Policies Possible? | Panel |
53 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Open | 1. Open Parliament e-Network (OPeN) 2. National Democratic Institute (NDI) | From Transparency and Openness of Data to Effective Anti-Corruption Strategies: Comparing Lessons from the Open Parliament and Open Government Communities | Panel |
54 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. DATA Uruguay 2. Sunlight Foundation 3. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 4. BetaNYC | Co-Creating a (Simple) Evaluation Canvas for Open Government Civic Tech | Workshop |
55 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Implementing SDG 16+ through Multi-Stakeholder Collaborations: Innovations from OGP Members | Panel |
56 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Iniciativa Latinoamericana por Los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) | How Ready Is Government for Artificial Intelligence? | Panel |
57 | Thursday May 30 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | OGP Local: Perspectives on the Advancement of Open Local Government | Fishbowl |
58 | Thursday, May 30, 16:40 - 18:00 | |||||||
59 | Thursday May 30 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Inclusion | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Plenary Session - Break the Roles: Putting Inclusion at the Center of Open Government | Panel |
60 | Friday, May 31, 09:00 - 10:20 | |||||||
61 | Friday May 31 09:00 - 10:20 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Impact | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) 3. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | Plenary Session - Open Government in Geopolitical Perspective: What Does the Future Look Like? | Panel |
62 | Friday, May 31, 10:30 - 11:50 | |||||||
63 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | Public Safety Canada | National Security and Democratic Values | Panel |
64 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | 1. Twaweza 2. K-Monitor 3. ePaństwo Foundation | A Survival Toolkit: Open Government in Restrictive Political Environments | Fishbowl |
65 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. Regional School of Public Administration (ReSPA) 2. OGP IRM Independent Researcher | Open Government and Service Delivery: Are We Missing an Opportunity to Act? | Lightning Talks |
66 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Open Government Innovations by Africa | Panel |
67 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Participation | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Government of the United Kingdom | Is Participation the Future of Governance? Leveraging OGP Commitments as a Tool for Participatory Policy Making | Fishbowl |
68 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Tanzania Media Foundation (TMF) 2. Hivos | Storytelling for Public Contracting Reforms: Data Literacy and Informed Citizen Reporting for Inclusive Public Contracting Reforms | Workshop |
69 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Indonesian Parliamentary Center (IPC) 2. Article 19 Mexico and Central America | Is Open Government Really Inclusive? Raising Awareness of Challenges in Accessing Information and Data for First Nations and Indigenous Women in Four Countries | Lightning Talks |
70 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Inclusion | 1. Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI) 2. Namati 3. Justice for All | The Year of Justice: How OGP Can Advance Grassroots Justice Efforts to Foster Government Accountability | Fishbowl |
71 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 211 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | International Budget Partnership (IBP) | Participatory Budgeting Beyond Box Ticking: Inclusive and Meaningful Participatory Budgeting in an Age of Inequality | Workshop |
72 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Transparency International (TI) | Gender and Corruption: Developing a Roadmap for Gendered Approaches to Anti-Corruption Commitments in OGP Action Plans | Workshop |
73 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | The Data Nutrition Project | Bias In, Bias Out: Building Better Artificial Intelligence | Panel |
74 | Friday May 31 10:30 - 11:50 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business (CCAB) | Economic Reconciliation through Procurement: Increasing Indigenous Participation in Canada’s Corporate and Government Supply Chains | Panel |
75 | Friday, May 31, 12:00 - 13:20 | |||||||
76 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA) | Stronger Media Systems for Open Government | Panel |
77 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Inclusion | 1. CARE International 2. Oxfam International 3. Kaduna State | Analysing the Political Economy of Gender and Open Government: Why It Matters and How to Do It | Workshop |
78 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | 1. Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) 2. Transparency International (TI) | Advancing the Cycle of Justice: Journalists, Activists, Officials, and Enforcement | Panel |
79 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | 1. Results for Development (R4D) 2. Wahana Visi Indonesia (WVI) | Pitfalls and Bright Spots: Crowdsourcing and Validating Why Social Accountability Designs Succeed and Fail | Workshop |
80 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Open | 1. Heritage Canada 2. Global Affairs Canada 3. Privy Council Office of Canada | Fostering a Democratic Digital Space | Panel |
81 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Inclusion | Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) | Beyond Inclusion! From Inclusivity to Responsiveness in Public Procurement to Empower Women, Youth, and Underrepresented Communities | Challenge Clinic |
82 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | 1. Open Data Charter (ODC) 2. SocialTIC | Openness Under Surveillance: Balancing Transparency and Privacy Measures | Workshop |
83 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | OGP Multi-Stakeholder Forums: Best Practices and Challenges Moving Forward | Panel |
84 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat | Agile Procurement Case Studies: How Better Government Purchasing Decisions Yield Better Citizen Outcomes | Lightning Talks |
85 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Impact | 1. State of Open Data 2. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) | The State of Open Data: Rebooting Open Data Interventions on the Road to 2030 | Knowledge Café |
86 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada | Declassification of Government Records: A Way Forward towards Improving Transparency | Panel |
87 | Friday May 31 12:00 - 13:20 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Etalab - French Government Digital Services 2. Tecnologico de Monterrey | The Present and Future of Public Algorithms | Panel |
88 | Friday, May 31, 13:40 - 15:00 | |||||||
89 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Inclusion | 1. World Wide Web Foundation 2. International Development Research Centre (IDRC) 3. Open Data for Development Network (OD4D) 4. The Carter Center | Operationalising Inclusiveness: How Do We Make Sure That National Action Plans Are Participatory and Inclusive? | Workshop |
90 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Participation | The B Team | Protect Speaking Out! How Censorship Laws, Internet Shutdowns, and Social Media Taxes Threaten Open Government and Economic Growth | Fishbowl |
91 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | 1. World Resources Institute (WRI) 2. Fundación Avina 3. Water Integrity Network (WIN) 4. Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) | Overcoming Water Inequality: Voices of Inspiration from the Ground Up | Lightning Talks |
92 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Impact | 1. Africa Network For Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ) 2. MacArthur Foundation | Asset Recovery in OGP: Peer-Learning on Recovery, Return, and Monitoring - Lessons from the Field | Fishbowl |
93 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Inclusion | Participants of the Indigenous Gathering | An Indigenous Framework for Open Government That Embodies the UNDRIP and the Declaration for Mother Earth with the Aim to Achieve Meaningful Self-Government for All Indigenous Peoples | Panel |
94 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Participation | 1. International Republican Institute (IRI) 2. Africtivistes | #KnowYourGovernment: Youth Leadership and Open Government in West Africa | Knowledge Café |
95 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | Open Government Partnership (OGP) | OGP’s First Flagship Report: How to Use It | Knowledge Café |
96 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Open | Inter-American Development Bank | How Can Citizen-Centered Technological Tools Generate More Open, Transparent, and Efficient Public Investment Systems? | Experiential Learning |
97 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Participation | 1. Department of Budget and Management (DBM), Government of the Philippines 2. Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Government of the Philippines 3. United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Philippines | #CivicTechTalks: On Closing the Feedback Loop and Bridging Accountability Gaps | Town Hall |
98 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. Humanist Institute for Collaborations with Developing Countries (Hivos) 2. Africa Freedom of Information Centre (AFIC) 3. Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI) 4. Iniciativa Latinoamericana por los Datos Abiertos (ILDA) 5. Young Innovations (YI) 6. Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) | Local Matters! Where Open Contracting Results Matter Most to People | Knowledge Café |
99 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | 1. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) 2. Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship (BII+E) | Artificial Intelligence and Policy Foresight: Lessons Learned and Future Directions | Knowledge Café |
100 | Friday May 31 13:40 - 15:00 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Public Safety Canada | National Security Transparency: Expert Perspectives | Panel |
101 | Friday, May 31, 15:10 - 16:30 | |||||||
102 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | 1. United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) 2. Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisation (SCVO) | Fostering the Accomplishment of the 2030 Agenda from the Bottom Up: Open Government as a Strategy to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals at Local Level | Fishbowl |
103 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 201 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 119 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Inclusion | 1. Accountability Lab 2. Restless Development | YOUth Knows Best: A Creative Space on Youth Leadership and the Future of OGP | Lightning Talks |
104 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 202 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 128 pax - Projector & Screen x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Impact | Reboot | Culture Hacking for Open Government: How to Use Art, Film, and Pop Culture to Up Our Impact | Panel |
105 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 205 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 70 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Participation | Mass LBP | Expanding the Use of Citizen Assemblies and Panels at the National, Regional, and Local Levels | Challenge Clinic |
106 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 206 | - Fishbowl Setup - Capacity for 155 pax - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 3 - Flipcharts x 4 | English French | Participation | Communauté d'Afrique Francophone des Données Ouvertes (CAFDO) | État du PGO en Afrique | Town Hall |
107 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 207 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 77 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 3 - Mic Stands x 2 - Flipcharts x 11 | English French | Open | 1. Open Knowledge Foundation 2. Datactivist | Open Washing: Who Makes It Happen and Can We Stop It? | Knowledge Café |
108 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 208 | - Classroom Setup - Capacity for 90 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Inclusion | Equal Measures 2030 | Open Government and Women's Rights: Synergies and Opportunities to Advance Both Agendas | Lightning Talks |
109 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 210 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 124 pax - Monitors x 2 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French Spanish | Participation | 1. World Resources Institute 2. Article 19 3. Derecho, Ambiente y Recursos Naturale (DAR) 4. Cultura Ecológica 5. Imaflora | Empowered Citizens: The Opportunity of the Escazú Convention to Drive Accountable Open Government for Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection, and Climate Action | Panel |
110 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 211 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 72 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Inclusion | First Nations Information Governance Centre (FNIGC) | First Nations Data Sovereignty | Experiential Learning |
111 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 214 | - Half-Rounds Setup - Capacity for 168 pax - Projectors and screens x 2 - Laptops x 2 - Confidence Monitor x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 4 - Flipcharts x 8 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Impact | 1. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) Canada 2. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) | Extractive Company Payment Disclosures: Increasing Openness and Accountability for How Resource Revenues Are Spent | Knowledge Café |
112 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 212 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 122 pax - Monitor x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 2 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Natural Resources Canada | The Evolution and Future Direction of the Open Data and Geospatial Information and Technology | Panel |
113 | Friday May 31 15:10 - 16:30 | 215 | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 172 pax - Screen & Projector x 1 - Laptop x 1 - Perfect Cue Clicker x 1 - Podium and Microphone x 1 - Wireless Microphones x 4 - Mic Stands x 2 | English French | Open | Public Safety Canada | Oversight and Review Bodies in the Canadian National Security Landscape | Panel |
114 | Friday, May 31, 16:40 - 18:00 | |||||||
115 | Friday May 31 16:40 - 18:00 | Canada Hall | - Theatre Setup - Capacity for 1,750 pax - Projectors & Screens x 3 - Laptops x 3 - Confidence Monitors x 2 - Perfect Cue Clickers x 2 - Podiums and Microphones x 2 - Wireless Microphones x 12 - Earset Microphones x 6 - Mic Stands x 6 - Livestream Capability | English French Spanish | Open | 1. Government of Canada 2. Open Government Partnership (OGP) | Closing Ceremony | Panel |