Democratic sectors
From DoWire Wiki
DoWire's pragmatic definition of e-democracy is based on the simple idea that e-democracy will make a positive contribution to citizens and democracies if best practices and democratic intent are applied by actors within the democratic sectors.
Our detailed list:
Contents |
[edit]
Government
- Representative Institutions and Elected Officials
- Administrations including Public Officials and Civil Servants
- Local, Regional, State/Provincial, National, Supra-National, Intergovernmental, International Governmental Organizations
[edit]
Political Interests
- Political Parties
- Candidates
- Interest Groups
- Community Groups, NGOs
- Activists and Elites
[edit]
Media
- Mass Media
- Online Media and Commerical Content
- Power Blogs, Citizen-based Online News
[edit]
Private Sector
- Software Developers including Open Source
- Connectivity (Technical access primarily market driven, government/libraries/others play role)
- Technology Devices
[edit]
Citizens
- Participating E-Citizens
- Informed Citizens Online
- Passive Citizens
- Disengaged Citizens