eRulemaking
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Electronic rulemaking (also known as eRulemaking and e-rulemaking) is the use of digital technologies by government agencies in the rulemaking and decision making processes. An interdisciplinary electronic rulemaking research community has formed as a result of National Science Foundation funding under the auspices of the Digital Government Program. Harvard University published a 2003 workshop report on the avenues for future research and the University of Pittsburgh published a 2004 stakeholder report assessing the widely discussed "Internet Changes Everything" thesis put forward by Professor Stephen Johnson in a 1998 law review article.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- eRulemaking Initiative
- E-Rulemaking Resource Website at the Penn Program on Regulation
- eRulemaking Research Group
- eRulemaking Research in Carnegie Mellon University
- eRulemaking Research in University of Pittsburgh Blog
- eRulemaking Testbed
- eRulemaking Portal by the State of Florida
- eRulemaking Portal by the Commonwealth of Virginia
- Cornell eRulemaking Initiative