Foundations of the Digital State: An independent report for Scottish Government by Gordon Guthrie
English | November 9, 2024 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0DMM66VQK | 212 pages | EPUB | 0.43 Mb
English | November 9, 2024 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0DMM66VQK | 212 pages | EPUB | 0.43 Mb
The Foundations of the Digital State is an independent report written for the Scottish Government.
It was a practioner-led, holistic review of how the state creates services built on digital foundations.
The review covered the entire political cycle: from think-tanks and manifestos, through policy development, programmes of proposed legislation, bills and bill packs, parliamentary process and onto the traditional disciplines of design, technology, data, delivery and ending in-service management.
It identified structural and institutional lacunae in state structures arising from the transition from an analogue to digital world and makes a series of recommendations to address them. The recommendations are underpinned with proposed legislation.
The issues are:
- The government needs a single organisation with the mechanism to make decisions about how digital systems should work, and parliament needs a single structure to oversee those decisions.
- Decisions about what digital systems should do are made sub-optimally by parliament using ad-hoc repurposed mechanisms.
- The state lacks a research capability for digital systems.
- unitary specification of services and systems
- better iteration in service development
- developing a research capability
The detailed recommendations are supported by details technical discussion in the 2 volumes of working papers.
About the author
Gordon Guthrie has a unique blend of experience, combinging a lifetime career on the internet as a software engineer for some of the UK and the worlds biggest tech companies, as well as front line political and policy experience.