A review of rationale for allocating costs and payments in producing and supplying public sector information PART A of 2 Parts – Chapters 1, 2 and 3) 13 March 2011 version


Autoria(s): Cook, John
Data(s)

13/03/2011

Resumo

This work reviews the rationale and processes for raising revenue and allocating funds to perform information intensive activities that are pertinent to the work of democratic government. ‘Government of the people, by the people, for the people’ expresses an idea that democratic government has no higher authority than the people who agree to be bound by its rules. Democracy depends on continually learning how to develop understandings and agreements that can sustain voting majorities on which democratic law making and collective action depends. The objective expressed in constitutional terms is to deliver ‘peace, order and good government’. Meeting this objective requires a collective intellectual authority that can understand what is possible; and a collective moral authority to understand what ought to happen in practice. Facts of life determine that a society needs to retain its collective competence despite a continual turnover of its membership as people die but life goes on. Retaining this ‘collective competence’ in matters of self-government depends on each new generation: • acquiring a collective knowledge of how to produce goods and services needed to sustain a society and its capacity for self-government; • Learning how to defend society diplomatically and militarily in relation to external forces to prevent overthrow of its self-governing capacity; and • Learning how to defend society against divisive internal forces to preserve the authority of representative legislatures, allow peaceful dispute resolution and maintain social cohesion.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40727/

Publicador

John Stanley Cook

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40727/1/1A-FINAL-2011-03-13.pdf

Cook, John (2011) A review of rationale for allocating costs and payments in producing and supplying public sector information PART A of 2 Parts – Chapters 1, 2 and 3) 13 March 2011 version. John Stanley Cook, Brisbane QLD. [Working Paper] (Unpublished)

Direitos

Collaborative Research Centre – Spatial Information (CRC-SI2)

© 2011 Collaborative Research Centre – Spatial Information (CRC-SI2) This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #080500 DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING #080610 Information Systems Organisation #120399 Design Practice and Management not elsewhere classified #140101 History of Economic Thought #140102 Macroeconomic Theory #140104 Microeconomic Theory #140200 APPLIED ECONOMICS #140203 Economic History #149902 Ecological Economics #149903 Heterodox Economics #160600 POLITICAL SCIENCE #160601 Australian Government and Politics #160605 Environmental Politics #170200 COGNITIVE SCIENCE #200400 LINGUISTICS #information economics #information infrastructure #governance #government #sociology #communications theory #information networks
Tipo

Working Paper