Presenting the International Working Group on Online Consultation and Public Policymaking
Posted on Sat, Mar 31, 2007 at 7:52 PM by Andrew ChadwickI'm currently at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard for the opening conference of the new, NSF-funded International Working Group on Online Consultation and Public Policymaking led by Peter Shane of Ohio State and Stephen Coleman of Leeds. The group consists of 17 members from around the world; a great mix of senior and junior colleagues with a diverse range of interests and concerns. The meeting has been extremely interesting and fruitful so far, with an excellent programme of future events and concrete outputs, including a special issue of the journal I/S and a jointly-authored book to follow. A list of the participants:
Professor Peter M. Shane, The Ohio State University, Moritz College of
Law
Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, University
of Leeds
Steven J. Balla, George Washington University, Washington,
D.C.
Patrizia Bertini, independent practitioner and Researcher,
European Internet Accessibilità Observatory, Manerbio, Italy
Andrew
Chadwick, Royal Holloway College, University of London
Sungsoo Hwang,
Ph.D. Candidate, University of Pittsburgh
David Lazer, Kennedy School
of Government, Harvard University
Jeffrey Lubbers, Washington College
of Law, American University, Washington, D.C.
Laurence
Monnoyer-Smith, University of Technology at Compiègne, France
Beth
Noveck, New York Law School
Kerrie Oakes, Ph.D. Candidate, Griffith
University, Queensland, Australia
Oren Perez, Faculty of Law,
Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel
Vincent Price, Annenberg
School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania
Alicia
Schatteman, Ph.D. candidate, The State University of New Jersey at
Newark, NJ
Polona Picman Štefancic, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Peter
L. Strauss, Betts Professor of Law, Columbia University
Scott Wright,
De Montfort University, Leicester, England.
See also David Lazer's blog entry at the Kennedy School Program on Networked Governance.
(Crossposted at the New Political Communication Unit Blog).