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Presentation
The role of expertise and experts in public service and policy
Arizona State University/Public Interest Technology Colloquium/ Institute for the Future/ (2022)
Abstract
A recorded Video Presentation of this Series IV Public Interest Technology Colloquium "Toward Transdisciplinarity" to the State University of Arizona for the IEEE Socio-Technical Systems Committee. Addresses the issues that have developed over recent decades on how community, public service, and outsourced expertise has changed and some of the consequences as digital government has seen some signal failures due to these failing interactions. As transdisciplinary approaches are becoming necessary (see the authors' next presentation due on 11Nov20 22 to IEEE ISTAS for further discussion of this style of approach, this time with a security orientation))
Keywords
  • public service,
  • trust,
  • digital government,
  • transdisciplinarity,
  • expert,
  • expertise
Publication Date
Winter August 27, 2022
Location
Arizona State University-University of Woolongong-delivered on Zoom from Melbourne Australia
Comments
Can also be found at https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/www.youtube.com/watch?v=WllDU0CwpLg__;!!IKRxdwAv5BmarQ!cy27IF90iBsg9TBHo1YecsJkbGvWZox1QmiBZoqKpKIeAS8UnzsfGtq0d66rS46xrwv0ntTZZP8KSMrMUfog$
Citation Information
Wigan, M.R. (2002) The role of expertise and experts in public service and policy. Public Interest Technology Colloquium, State University of Arizona. Delivered 27 July.