Reducing regulation through crowdsourcing and challenge
...people affected by regulation. They also ran challenge sessions with them. The team grouped regulations into themes, and published them online in a rolling programme. Each theme had a 5...
...people affected by regulation. They also ran challenge sessions with them. The team grouped regulations into themes, and published them online in a rolling programme. Each theme had a 5...
...action, to have a policy and to change the law. There have been twenty-two fatalities as a result of dog attacks since 2005 - thirteen children and nine adults -...
...we develop physical artefacts to support policy development - or through digital ‘spaces’. Although they do not require physical space, digital products, especially in government, need to fit in a...
...action are in- and out- of scope. Others use it to think more broadly, exploring different types of action that they would otherwise not have been prompted to consider. Applying...
...- making it visual - provides a starting point for surfacing and understanding different perspectives. Policy application 2: Unintended consequences An intervention intended to achieve one policy outcome may have...
...you are a new policy-maker wondering how this all works, the government provides comprehensive election guidance for civil servants online. This is a time when we have some space to...
...to consultations in more open and flexible ways. Consultations are currently fully digitalised, and most respondents respond via online portals. This allows quick digitalisation of results if questions are in...
...Policy Lab’s workshops were designed to prepare the attendees - who numbered roughly 100 across the three days - for the practicalities of filling in the Expression of Interest form,...
...are constantly in conversation. Of course, we communicate regularly in the written form - and are accustomed to critically challenge while we read. But according to the report, the subconscious...
...particularly when using online tools like twitter and blogs - can increase legitimacy by demonstrating to the public that we are developing policy based on their feedback. See Sanjan’s blog...