National Agenda Document Project

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The National Agenda Document Project is a non-partisan collaboration that allows citizens to participate in national planning and provide more coherent input to their elected representatives. This political experiment founded in 2006, has already emerged as a fascinating example of post-partisan citizen collaboration, especially in light of the striking political and social diversity of the participants.

The National Agenda document resides Google Docs, a collaborative online word processor. Members of Congress are invited to review the document. Participants are currently collaborating on the next edition with the intent to finalize and publish it by December, 2007.

The 2007 National Agenda Document was frozen and published on January 3, 2007, and can be viewed at: National Agenda Document

[edit] Origin of The National Agenda Document Project

The 2005 book America 2076, asserted that network centric consumer technologies could be leveraged to neutralize or resolve the key issues that undermine American Democracy and frustrate the national discourse: corrupt lobbying, partisanship, polarization, over-reliance on mass media among others. The book went on to propose the development of an Internet application that would allow US registered voters to use web browsers, cell phones and other devices to collaborate on the annual creation of a "National Agenda" document. Instead of relying on K-Street (the lobbying industry) to arbitrate and prioritize the input of 300 million citizens, the arbitration process would be pushed down to the citizen level. Input would be refined by teams of registered voters collaborating online to create coherent input on key issues. The resulting documents (a National Agenda document and a 100 Year Plan document) would be updated and published each year before the opening of the next session of Congress. Elected representatives will be motivated to follow the document because the Internet application would also generate election year scorecards showing how well each elected official complied with the citizen input provided in the National Agenda Document.

The National Agenda Document Project was founded in 2006 with the encouragement and assistance of readers of America 2076. It is so far a small political experiment, and does not implement the full system proposed in America 2076. However the project represents an important proof of concept and first step toward collaborative national planning, with potentially large implications for the future of American politics.

[edit] How to Participate

Any U.S. citizen is welcome to participate in this experiment. Participants can edit and refinement the National Agenda document, and can invite other participants. Participation is free and requires only 2 steps:

  1. Sign up for an account at Google Docs
  2. Request an invite by filling out a simple invitation request form.

NOTE: The National Agenda Document Project is not affiliated with Google in any way.