Learning how to be responsive to public policy issues affecting SSSI members
Data(s) |
14/09/2012
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Resumo |
Human survival depends on human ingenuity in using resources at hand to sustain human life. The historical record – in wrings and archaeological artefacts – provides evidence of the growth and collapse of political organisations and societies. In the institutions of Western civilisation, some traditions have endured over millennia where the roles of monarchs and public officials have been organised in perpetual succession. These roles were developed as conventions in the British Parliament after 1295 and provided the models of corporate governance in both public and private enterprise that have been continuously refined to the present day. In 2011, the Queensland Parliament legislated to introduce a new and more open system of scrutiny of legislation through a system of portfolio-based parliamentary committees. The committees began to function more actively in July 2012 and have inviting submissions from stakeholders and experts in a structured way to consider the government’s priorities in its legislative programme. The questions now are whether the Surveying and Spatial Sciences can respond expertly to address the terms of reference and meet the timetables of the various parliamentary committees. This paper discusses some of the more important and urgent issues that deserve debate that the profession needs to address in becoming more responsive to matters of public policy. |
Formato |
application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation |
Identificador | |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/54227/1/2012-10-15LearningHowToBeResponsiveEprintsFormat.pptx http://www.sssi.org.au/qsic Cook, John (2012) Learning how to be responsive to public policy issues affecting SSSI members. In Queensland Surveying and Spatial Conference ; The future of surveying and spatial science is Open: Open collaboration open data open standards and open opportunities., 13-14 September2012, Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre. (Unpublished) |
Direitos |
John S Cook This modified version of a QSSC 2012 conference presentation removes some images and elements of style that may involve copyright of third parties. In order to make the information more freely available while als reducing risks of copyright offence infringement Dr John S Cook is now publishing this 15 October 2012 through the QUT ePrints ebsite under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia licence. |
Fonte |
Faculty of Law |
Palavras-Chave | #080000 INFORMATION AND COMPUTING SCIENCES #080703 Human Information Behaviour #100000 TECHNOLOGY #140000 ECONOMICS #140104 Microeconomic Theory #140202 Economic Development and Growth #140219 Welfare Economics #160500 POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION #160600 POLITICAL SCIENCE #understandings #agreements #information #open acccess #right to information #government #community engagement #informed consent #human capital #organisational capital |
Tipo |
Conference Item |