INSPIRE 2014.pptx

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LISE SCHRØDERAALBORG UNIVERSITY Henning Sten Hansen, Line Hvingel & Lise Schrøder (AAU) Jesper Høi Skovdal (Geoforum Denmark)

Transcript of INSPIRE 2014.pptx

LISE SCHRØDER│ AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Henning Sten Hansen, Line Hvingel & Lise Schrøder (AAU) Jesper Høi Skovdal (Geoforum Denmark)

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Presentation overview

•  Background •  Nordic surveys •  The way forward •  Concluding remarks

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Transforming government – and society

Benefits/Costs

Time/Complexity/Integration

Web presence

Interaction

Transaction

Transformation

E-Democracy

Five-stage model of e-government (Siau & Long, 2005)

Political Leap

Culture Leap

Technology jump

Technology jump

Transforming government service

Automating existing process

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

E-readiness is a measure of the quality of a country’s ICT infrastructure and the ability of its consumers, businesses and governments to use ICT to their benefit

E-readiness / digital economy

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

ICT to boost competitiveness and wellbeing The Global InformationTechnology Report 2014 (World Economic Forum, 2014)

The Networked Readiness Index (NRI), part of the 2014 Global Information Technology Report: The Risks and Rewards of Big Data, published today, ranks 148 countries for the quality of their digital infrastructure and ability to use ICTs to generate economic growth, foster innovation and improve the well-being of their citizens.

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

ICT to boost competitiveness and wellbeing

(World Economic Forum, 2014)

Finland (1) – ‘Technology savvy society’: - outstanding digital infrastructure – perhaps the best in the world (referring to GITR) - 90% of its population using the internet, high levels of innovation, - reaping the rewards of investing heavily in ICT after a crisis in the mid-1990s Sweden (3) – ‘Innovation eco-system’: -  world-class yet affordable digital infrastructure and stable pro-business

environment, despite high tax rates. -  outstanding use of ICTs by individuals, businesses and government -  one of the highest innovation performances in the world -  a truly knowledge-based society Norway (5) – ‘highly networked’: -  well-developed and affordable ICT infrastructure -  Digital uptake is almost universal among Norway’s population: 95% are internet

users and more than 90% have home access to a personal computer and internet -  a stable pro-business and pro-innovation environment -  a government aware of the importance of connectivity for the economic and social

development of a geographically vast nation with a widely dispersed population.

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Dynamics

People Data

Access Network

Policies

Standards

Spatial Data Infrastructure (Rajabifard et al, 2002)

SDI and the digital society

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

‘The term 'spatially enabled society' attempts to describe an emerging cultural and governancerevolution: pervasive spatial information technologies and spatially equipped citizens are changing the way economies, people, and environments are managed and organized. Economic wealth, social stability and environmental protection can be facilitated through the development of spatial information products and services created by all levels of society including governments, the business sector, and citizens’

Spatially Enabled Society by Enemark and Rajabifard (2011)

Spatial enablement

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

ULI has made surveys n Sweden for more than 10 years – the latest in 2013

GI Norden wanted to have similar surveyes in all Nordic countries

•  Denmark 2009 and 2014

•  Finland 2010 and one forthcoming

•  Norge and Iceland are still missing

Nordic GIS-readiness surveys

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Increasing use of GIS

43 % of the organisations are usign mobile GIS

Swedish surveys 2003, 2007 and 2013

(ULI, 2013)

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Public organisations using GIS

According to the 2013 swedish survey it is almost 90 % - and in the Danish 93 %

(ULI, 2013)

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

New ways of working with GIS

43 % of the organisations in Sweden are using mobile GIS

In Denmark the number is 68 % of the organisations in Sweden are using mobile GIS

(ULI, 2013)

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Hansen et al (2010)

Denmark Sweden Finland

http://icaci.org/files/documents/ICC_proceedings/ICC2009/html/nonref/3_25.pdf

http://www.gsdidocs.org/gsdiconf/GSDI-9/slides/TS61.5.pdf

SDI Strategies

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Mostly geografisk information retrieval and simple standard analysis (2008-2010 surveys)

In Denmark the 2014 picture is almost similar

Use of geographical information

Danmark Sverige Finland

Production, mapping 10 % 15 % 19 %

Development, research, teaching 9 % 2 % 7 %

Simple use 58 % 58 % 26 %

Advanced use 12 % 11 % 12 %

Support, management 6 % 7 % 14 %

Other 4 % 7 % 22 %

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Dynamics

People Data

Access Network

Policies

Standards

From Data to People

2014

2002

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

From PSI and INSPIRE directives to smart government

•  The PSI Directive was implemented in July 2005 aiming at regulating and stimulating PSI

•  Originally the idea was to make all PSI available for re-use

•  Pressures from some member states lowered the ambitions to just encouraging freeing public sector information

•  A key objective of the INSPIRE Directive is to make more and better spatial information available for Community policy-making

•  A fundamental principle is that ‘spatial data needed for good governance should be available on conditions that are not restricting its extensive use’

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Open Government data

Data must be accessible

Data must be machine processable Access must be non-discriminatory

Data must be complete

Data must be primary

Data must be timely

Data formats must be non-proprietary

Data must be license free

DK OGD principles FIN

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On going research

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

To be continued …

The present survey provides an updated image of status and challenges in relation to the use of spatial information, the construction of the common infrastructure for spatial information, and the work related to the further development of the foundation for the digital administration. One of the thought-provoking trends is that INSPIRE seems to be discussed less in the organisations. On the other hand, there is no doubt that standards continue to be considered of great significance, not at least in relation to metadata, data quality and data specifications, just as spatial data are clearly being communicated more and more.

LISE SCHRØDER AALBORG UNIVERSITY

Thank you for your attention

SDI Research Group – Aalborg University

Henning Sten Hansen, Bent Hulegaard Jensen

Line Hvingel & Lise Schrøder

Geoforum Denmark

Jesper Høi Skovdal

Mail: [email protected]