Office of eDiplomacy

The Office of eDiplomacy acts as an applied technology think tank for the United States Department of State. As part of the Bureau of Information Resource Management, eDiplomacy serves as a liaison between Department of State IT specialists and Department of State diplomats and other employees / end users. Its mission is to support U.S. diplomats and American diplomacy through collaborative technologies, and to promote other technologies that assist this diplomatic work.

Contents

History

In 2002, Ambassador James Holmes started the eDiplomacy Task Force. In 2003, the task force was reorganized into the Office of eDiplomacy. Currently, eDiplomacy falls under the Deputy Chief Information Officer for Business, Management, and Planning.

Richard Boly is the current Director, and Scott A. Smith is the Chief of eDiplomacy's Diplomatic Innovation Division. [1]

Other previous eDiplomacy Directors at the U.S. Department of State include:

Projects

eDiplomacy is actively developing a number of technologies which allow the diplomatic community to share and maintain institutional knowledge. A few of its current projects are:

Other Media Mentions

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.state.gov/m/irm/ediplomacy Office of eDiplomacy
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Burton, Bruce; Eric M. Johnson, Molly E. Moran (May 1, 2008). "Making It Happen: KM at the Working" (PDF). APQC 13th Annual Knowledge Management Conference. Chicago, Illinois, USA: APQC 
  4. ^ Major Programs of the Office of eDiplomacy
  5. ^ Bain, Ben (2008-06-23). "State Department will get SMART". FCW.com (Federal Computer Weekly). http://www.fcw.com/print/22_18/management/152919-1.html. Retrieved 2008-07-20. 
  6. ^ Major Programs of the Office of eDiplomacy