At the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center this spring, assembled participants met to discuss CrowdLaw, namely how to use technology to improve the quality and effectiveness of law and policymaking through greater public engagement. We put together and signed 12 principles to promote the use of CrowdLaw by local legislatures and national parliaments, calling for legislatures, technologists and the public to participate in creating more open and participatory lawmaking practices. We invite you to sign the Manifesto using the form below.
Draft dated May 29, 2018
- To improve public trust in democratic institutions, we must improve how we govern in the 21st century.
- CrowdLaw is any law, policy-making or public decision-making that offers a meaningful opportunity for the public to participate in one or multiples stages of decision-making, including but not limited to the processes of problem identification, solution identification, proposal drafting, ratification, implementation or evaluation.
- CrowdLaw draws on innovative processes and technologies and encompasses diverse forms of engagement among elected representatives, public officials, and those they represent.
- When designed well, CrowdLaw may help governing institutions obtain more relevant facts and knowledge as well as more diverse perspectives, opinions and ideas to inform governing at each stage and may help the public exercise political will.
- When designed well, CrowdLaw may help democratic institutions build trust and the public to play a more active role in their communities and strengthen both active citizenship and democratic culture.
- When designed well, CrowdLaw may enable engagement that is thoughtful, inclusive, informed but also efficient, manageable and sustainable.
- Therefore, governing institutions at every level should experiment and iterate with CrowdLaw initiatives in order to create formal processes for diverse members of society to participate in order to improve the legitimacy of decision-making, strengthen public trust and produce better outcomes.
- Governing institutions at every level should encourage research and learning about CrowdLaw and its impact on individuals, on institutions and on society.
- The public also has a responsibility to improve our democracy by demanding and creating opportunities to engage and then actively contributing expertise, experience, data and opinions.
- Technologists should work collaboratively across disciplines to develop, evaluate and iterate varied, ethical and secure CrowdLaw platforms and tools, keeping in mind that different participation mechanisms will achieve different goals.
- Governing institutions at every level should encourage collaboration across organizations and sectors to test what works and share good practices.
- Governing institutions at every level should create the legal and regulatory frameworks necessary to promote CrowdLaw and better forms of public engagement and usher in a new era of more open, participatory and effective governing.
The CrowdLaw Manifesto has been signed by the following individuals and organizations:
Individuals
- Victoria Alsina, Senior Fellow at The GovLab and Faculty Associate at Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University
- Marta Poblet Balcell , Associate Professor, RMIT University
- Robert Bjarnason — President & Co-founder, Citizens Foundation; Better Reykjavik
- Pablo Collada — Former Executive Director, Fundación Ciudadano Inteligente
- Mukelani Dimba — Co-chair, Open Government Partnership
- Hélène Landemore, Associate Professor of Political Science, Yale University
- Shu-Yang Lin, re:architect & co-founder, PDIS.tw
- José Luis Martí , Vice-Rector for Innovation and Professor of Legal Philosophy, Pompeu Fabra University
- Jessica Musila — Executive Director, Mzalendo
- Sabine Romon — Chief Smart City Officer — General Secretariat, Paris City Council
- Cristiano Ferri Faría — Director, Hacker Lab, Brazilian House of Representatives
- Nicola Forster — President and Founder, Swiss Forum on Foreign Policy
- Raffaele Lillo — Chief Data Officer, Digital Transformation Team, Government of Italy
- Tarik Nesh-Nash — CEO & Co-founder, GovRight; Ashoka Fellow
- Beth Simone Noveck, Director, The GovLab and Professor at New York University Tandon School of Engineering
- Ehud Shapiro , Professor of Computer Science and Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science
Organizations
- Citizens Foundation, Iceland
- Fundación Ciudadano Inteligente, Chile
- International School for Transparency, South Africa
- Mzalendo, Kenya
- Smart Cities, Paris City Council, Paris, France
- Hacker Lab, Brazilian House of Representatives, Brazil
- Swiss Forum on Foreign Policy, Switzerland
- Digital Transformation Team, Government of Italy, Italy
- The Governance Lab, New York, United States
- GovRight, Morocco
- ICT4Dev, Morocco