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April 1998  

The Challenge of Cyber-Parliaments
and
Statutory Virtual Assemblies

Anthony Judge ()
Union of International Associations (http://www.uia.org/)

Background

The purpose of this note is to indicate a number of lines of investigation relating to the opportunity of information technology to support the work of statutory bodies. There is no lack of studies on electronic meetings, groupware and electronic democracy -- since the explosive development of the Internet (and especially with respect to it). However relatively little has been explored in relation to the special constraints of statutory bodies, the relationship to their respective secretariats and infrastructures, and their possible "openness" to advocacy groups and citizens in general.

These statutory concerns are also distinct from the different "electronic democracy" intiatives to establish democratic assemblies involving extensive citizen participation -- which tend to be relatively unconcerned by the challenges of the relationship to established processes of governance and debate in parliaments and their associated bodies.

In what follows, little attention will be paid to the technology or the software since these have been developed to a point where it is their application to statutory meetings that must first be considered. Adapations and extensions of the technology can later be explored within a broader framework.

Constraints on effective functioning of conventional statutory assemblies

A conventional physical parliament or assembly building engenders a number of communication constraints through the processes it entails. These include:

Opportunity of virtual assembly

It is clear that by their very nature electronic exchanges can reframe many of the constraints noted above, especially in the case of written exchanges. Whilst these opportunities are briefly summarized in what immediately follows, the principal issue is how to marry the physical and electronic approaches to democratic assembly. This is dealt with in a subsequent section.

Reservations requiring new investigation and procedures

It is important to beware of the kind of enthusiasms for electronic communication that obscures consideration of some very real issues that it would be totally inappropriate to ignore. These all call for investigation, and even continuous monitoring, if experimental or hybrid implementation is envisaged.

Hybrid assemblies: compromising between face-to-face and virtual assemblies

Clearly the way forward needs to take the form of some kind of compromise between the extremes of "face-to-face only" and "virtual only" forms of statutory assembly.

The nature of this hybrid needs to be determined by trial and error. Some face-to-face sessions can certainly be shifted to virtual encounters. Guidelines and rules may be developed to assist in this. There should clearly be no excuse of "not-enough-time" to handle certain issues important to minorities -- when these can be debated electronically if representatives have time from issues that need to be debated face-to-face. Some virtual encounters may need to take face-to-face form at particular points in their work. The characteristics of these switch-over points need to be discovered.

Spurious excuses for restricting public access need to be carefully explored when virtual opportunities abound. On the other hand technological innovation will almost certainly be required to counteract the opportunities for abuse that will be created.

It will be important to avoid any form of dysfunctional separation between face-to-face and virtual encounters. The boundaries should be kept flexible. Those unfamiliar with one or other should have access to assistance -- of which there is a lot of experience in electronic communications.

A pattern of alternation between one or other form could be explored. Perhaps one-in-three in virtual form initially. There is also the possibility of holding face-to-face and electronic debates simultaneously, with one feeding into the other. In complex modern societies, there is a lot to be said for the notion that the virtual form is permanently "in session" rather than the present pattern of extensive vacations to enable representatives to deal with constituency business. This after all reflects the pattern of activity of the financial markets on which the economic survival of many countries depends.

A variable hybrid form allows all parties to learn of the advantages and constraints of the alternatives. It provides for the possibility of moving from "primarily face-to-face" to "primarily virtual", as and when this proves appropriate. But for this variability to be possible, provisions for it must be made right from the start.

Clearly those faced with the opportunity of such explorations will have considerable advantage over societies encumbered by entrenched patterns of face-to-face communications that are frequently demonstrated to be dysfunctional. ------------------

Related texts and resources

Harlan Cleveland. Leadership and the Information Revolution. Minneapolis, World Academy of Art and Science, 1997

Brooks J Jordan. Collective Learning Online: a report on the Information Society and Governance Project. (sponsored by the European Commission's Forward Studies Unit and the Institute for Prospective Technological Studies). 1998

Anthony Judge. Future Operation of International Organizations within an Electronic Environment: framework for reflection on intra- and inter-organizational issues of relevance to both intergovernmental organizations and NGOs. Brussels, 1996 (http://www.uia.org/uiadocs/electron.htm)

Anthony Judge. Sustainable dialogue as a necessary template for sustainable global community. Brussels, 1995 (http://www.uia.org/uiadocs/dialog.htm)

UK Citizens Online Democracy (UKCOD): Britain's First National Online Democracy Project (http://www.democracy.org.uk)

Devolution must produce electronic parliament (Note). Hot-Echo: Journal of the Scottish Software Community 1997 (http://www.hotecho.org/internet/internet3.html)

Telematics, Community & Electronic Democracy links (http://www.brent.gov.uk/other/telem.htm)

Information Society - House of Lords report (http://hmsoinfo.gov.uk/hmso/document/inforsoc.htm)

IAPT - Internet All Person Talks on Northern Ireland (http://www.niweb.com/org/IAPT/)

Electronic Democracy - List of WWW Sites (http://www.naturespace.co.nz/ed/edwww.htm)

Electronic Democracy Resources (http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~lpjs503/)

Electronic Democracy - New Zealand! (http://www.naturespace.co.nz/ed/index.htm)

The World Wide Web as a Universal Interface to Government Services (Project Report 96-2),     Editors: Ann DiCaterino, Theresa A. Pardo. Contributors: Center for Technology in Government (SUNY System Administration), et al. (http://www.ctg.albany.edu/resources/htmlrpt/ittfnlrp.html)
 

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