The Innovations in Government Program was a premier academic entity for recognizing and promoting excellence in the public sector and fostering innovative policy solutions.
The Program's principal initiative was the Innovations in American Government Awards.
The Innovations in Government Program was a premier academic entity for recognizing and promoting excellence in the public sector and fostering innovative policy solutions.
The Program's principal initiative was the Innovations in American Government Awards.
To find the latest research, teaching, and discussion on public-sector innovation, follow @Kennedy_School and visit the Kennedy School online ⤵️ hks.harvard.edu/
"Should disproportionate suspicions result in unnecessarily complex applications for everyone and higher program administrative costs for taxpayers? I don't think so," says @CityofSouthBend CIO @DKLinn MPP '15 bit.ly/3oJBAO0
The @HarvardAsh recently published a case study about OOD’s model of providing employment-related services to eligible Ohioans, helping them achieve their employment goals.🌟@Kennedy_School
To read the case study➡️bit.ly/3Fhwb5Q
ALT The Harvard Kennedy School Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation logo on a red background.
Today's #DataSmartCityPod episode is about Georgia's I-85 living innovation lab - the safer, more sustainable highway of the future is already here, thanks to @GADeptofTrans and @TheRayHighway
Listen and subscribe to Data-Smart City Pod to learn more! bit.ly/3t24sUi
As cities experience more extreme weather and natural disasters, how can data help build more resilient urban environments?
Listen below to learn how @TheCityofBR is tackling flood damage and stormwater mitigation thanks to data-driven mapping 🎧 bit.ly/318dlQF
"The idea is to balance out the whole interconnected system and find ways to detain water upstream before lower elevations are inundated." @stormwaterebr
Read how @TheCityofBR is working toward a safer, drier future in the article below. bit.ly/3lnHli4
📢 New episode! Listen to @GoldsmithOnGov and @ricardo_hausman discuss urban economics, data-driven policies, and how mayors can leave their cities better than they inherited them.
Listen here or search Data-Smart City Pod wherever you get your podcasts
bit.ly/30uTZEr
"Paper-based and manually processed governance has proven insufficient in terms of both efficiency and equity. Concerns from the smart city critics should be speed bumps, not roadblocks, on the way to a more equitable, sustainable and smarter future." bit.ly/3bj9lho
New article alert! Check out how @OakDOT is using data and equity to guide their infrastructure work in @Oakland and address historic inequities in our latest post. bit.ly/3z1kNYX
From studying algorithmic bias to researching data privacy, @Kennedy_School's @LatanyaSweeney is working to ensure everyone is treated fairly by the technology that increasingly rules our lives bit.ly/3AwIbP8
Most of the major civil infrastructure in the US was designed and built during the 1960s.
It's time to invest in new smart infrastructure argue Stephen Goldsmith, Betsey Gardner, and Jill Jamieson in a recent Ash Center report @byShourjya@GovExecbit.ly/3AW707n
🏙 In a new paper, @GoldsmithOnGov, Betsy Gardner, and Jill Jamieson argue that intelligent infrastructure should be a priority for policymakers at all levels of government as they develop infrastructure spending plans.
Read the paper ➡️ ken.sc/2XH6nA1
🎧 In the latest episode of the Data-Smart City Pod, listen to @GoldsmithOnGov and Jack Dangermond @Esri discuss multi-dimension GIS and equity bit.ly/3kXy40Q