DavePress
A blog about technology, culture and the bits in between, with a focus on government and public services. Written and curated by Dave Briggs, founder and director of Kind of Digital. Find out more.
Get my newsletter!

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.Stay updated!
Recent Comments
Tags
Apple Blogging cloud collaboration Communities community consultation culture data democracy digitalengagement engagement facebook google government hyperlocal ict idea innovation internet it learning learning pool links localgov localgovcamp local government localgovernment localgovweb mobile opendata opengov opengovernment research socialmedia Social Media Software strategy technology twitter Video web web 2.0 web24gov wordpressCategories
Archives
Blogroll
- Al Kitching
- barcampUKGovWeb
- Beth Kanter
- CivicSurf
- David Wilcox
- Digital Pioneer
- Dominic Campbell
- Ed Mitchell
- Emma Mulqueeny
- Gallomanor
- James Governor
- Jenny Brown
- Jeremy Gould
- John Naughton
- Justin Kerr-Stevens
- Laura Whitehead
- Lee Hopkins
- Lloyd Davies
- LocalGovGlossary
- Mark O’Neill
- Neil Williams
- Neville Hobson
- Nick Booth
- Owen Barder
- Palimpsest
- Paul Canning
- Rui Grilo
- Sharon O’Dea
- Simon Berry
- Simon Dickson
- SoSaidThe.Organisation
- Steph Gray
- Steve Bridger
- Steve Dale
- The Connected Republic
- the interruption
- Thriving Too
- Tim Davies
- Tom Watson MP
Tag Archives: icele
Drip, drip… more ICELE news
David Wilcox pointed me in the direction of the latest E-Government newsletter from Headstar, and their article about ICELE’s slow and rather painful death: In the medium term, the government is considering an overhaul of e-democracy policy which could bring … Continue reading
Further ICELE debate
Steven Clift rightly points folk to the discussions going on at the UK & Ireland eDemocracy exchange about the demise of ICELE, in the comments to my previous post on the topic. Here’s a sample of what folk are saying … Continue reading
ICELE – now you don’t
Poor old ICELE. First of all, Professor Stephen Coleman questioned it’s utility on the Connecting Bristol blog: I have been following e-democracy in the UK since its earliest manifestations in the work of UKCOD (UK Citizens e-Democracy), established in 1996. … Continue reading
