Prelims

Technology vs. Government: The Irresistible Force Meets the Immovable Object

ISBN: 978-1-83867-952-1, eISBN: 978-1-83867-951-4

ISSN: 2050-2060

Publication date: 19 March 2024

Citation

(2024), "Prelims", Levine, L. (Ed.) Technology vs. Government: The Irresistible Force Meets the Immovable Object (Studies in Media and Communications, Vol. 25), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxv. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2050-206020240000025010

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Lloyd Levine


Half Title Page

TECHNOLOGY VS. GOVERNMENT

Series Page

STUDIES IN MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS

Series Editors: Laura Robinson, Shelia R. Cotten and Jeremy Schulz

Volumes 8–10: Laura Robinson and Shelia R. Cotten

Volume 11 Onwards: Laura Robinson, Shelia R. Cotten and Jeremy Schulz

Recent Volumes:

Volume 7: School Shootings: Mediatized Violence in a Global Age – Edited by Glenn W. Muschert and Johanna Sumiala
Volume 8: Communication and Information Technologies Annual: Doing and Being Digital: Mediated Childhoods – Edited by Laura Robinson, Shelia R. Cotten and Jeremy Schulz
Volume 9: Communication and Information Technologies Annual: Politics, Participation, and Production – Edited by Laura Robinson, Shelia R. Cotten and Jeremy Schulz
Volume 10: Communication and Information Technologies Annual: Digital Distinctions and Inequalities – Edited by Laura Robinson, Shelia R. Cotten, Jeremy Schulz, Timothy M. Hale and Apryl A. Williams
Volume 11: Communication and Information Technologies Annual: [New] Media Cultures – Edited by Laura Robinson, Jeremy Schulz, Shelia R. Cotten, Timothy M. Hale, Apryl A. Williams and Joy L. Hightower
Volume 12: Communication and Information Technologies Annual: Digital Empowerment: Opportunities and Challenges of Inclusion in Latin America and the Caribbean – Edited by Laura Robinson, Jeremy Schulz and Hopeton S. Dunn
Volume 13: Brazil: Media from the Country of the Future – Edited by Laura Robinson, Jeremy Schulz and Apryl A. Williams; Guest Volume Editors: Pedro Aguiar, John Baldwin, Antonio C. La Pastina, Monica Martinez, Sonia Virgínia Moreira, Heloisa Pait and Joseph D. Straubhaar; Volume Guest Associate and Assistant Editors: Sayonara Leal and Nicole Speciale
Volume 14: Social Movements and Media – Edited by Jennifer Earl and Deana A. Rohlinger
Volume 15: e-Health: Current Evidence, Promises, Perils and Future Directions – Edited by Timothy M. Hale, Wen-Ying Sylvia Chou and Shelia R. Cotten; Assistant Editor: Aneka Khilnani
Volume 16: Media and Power in International Contexts: Perspectives on Agency and Identity – Edited by Apryl A. Williams & Laura Robinson; Guest Editor: Ruth Tsuria; Associate Editor: Aneka Khilnani
Volume 17: Networks, Hacking and Media – CITAMS@30: Now and Then and Tomorrow – Edited by Barry Wellman, Laura Robinson, Casey Brienza, Wenhong Chen and Shelia R. Cotten; Associate Editor: Aneka Khilnani
Volume 18: The M in CITAMS@30: Media Sociology – Edited by Casey Brienza, Laura Robinson, Barry Wellman, Shelia R. Cotten and Wenhong Chen
Volume 19: Mediated Millennials – Edited by Jeremy Schulz, Laura Robinson, Aneka Khilnani, John Baldwin, Heloisa Pait, Apryl A. Williams, Jenny Davis and Gabe Ignatow
Volume 20: Theorizing Criminality and Policing in the Digital Media Age – Edited by Jeremy Schulz, Laura Robinson and Julie. B. Wiest
Volume 21: Mass Mediated Representations of Crime and Criminality – Edited by Jeremy Schulz, Laura Robinson and Julie. B. Wiest
Volume 22: Media, Development and Democracy – Edited by Heloisa Pait and Juliana Laet
Volume 23: Data Ethics and Digital Privacy in Learning Health Systems for Palliative Medicine – Edited by Virginia M. Miori, Daniel J. Miori, Flavia Burton and Catherine G. Cardamone
Volume 24: Creating Culture Through Media and Communication – Edited by Sonia Virginia Moreira, Katia Moles, Laura Robinson and Jeremy Schulz

Title Page

STUDIES IN MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS - VOLUME 25

TECHNOLOGY VS. GOVERNMENT: THE IRRESISTIBLE FORCE MEETS THE IMMOVABLE OBJECT

EDITED BY

LLOYD LEVINE

University of California at Riverside - School of Public Policy, USA

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

Copyright Page

Emerald Publishing Limited

Emerald Publishing, Floor 5, Northspring, 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 4DL.

First edition 2024

Copyright © 2024 Emerald Publishing Limited.

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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-83867-952-1 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-83867-951-4 (Online)

ISBN: 978-1-83867-953-8 (Epub)

ISSN: 2050-2060 (Series)

Dedication Page

This book is dedicated to the following people.

  • (1)

    This book is dedicated to Generation T. I hope that you find a government that changes its approach to technology usage and integration. I hope you will take your passion for public service and be a part of that change.

  • (2)

    To all the hard-working elected officials and public servants working in various legislatures, boards of supervisors, city councils, school boards, agencies, departments, divisions, commissions, offices, boards, and any other level of government. Thank you for your dedication to public service.

  • (3)

    To my children, Alise and Carlie, members of Generation T. They each had iPads and laptops before they reached the age of 10. I hope this book helps your future governments embrace the technologies and technological ethos to match their clients and solve the complex problems of the day.

Contents

List of Figures and Tables xi
About the Contributors xiii
Acknowledgments xvii
Preface xix
Introduction 1
Section 1: The Past – How and Why Governments Struggle with Purchasing and Integrating Technology
Chapter 1: Stumbling Blocks: The Structure and Imperatives of Government Agencies Lead to Technology Failures
John Thomas Flynn with Lloyd Levine 11
Chapter 2: Cybernetic Security and the Failures of Technological Governance in the New York Subway
Noah McClain 49
Chapter 3: Connect the Whole Community: Leadership Gaps Drive the Digital Divide and Fuel Disaster and Social Vulnerabilities
Catherine Sandoval and Patrick Lanthier 75
Section 2: The People – The Transition to eGovernment and the Impact On The Digitally Disconnected
Chapter 4: Delivering Information and Services Using eGovernment: A Case Study of Digital “Haves” and “Have Nots” Using @CDC: Twitter, eGov, and COVID-19
Juliana Maria Trammel, Laura Robinson and Lloyd Levine 107
Chapter 5: Health Carework and Digital Inclusion as Super Social Determinant of Health
Cara A. Chiaraluce and Lloyd Levine 129
Section 3: The Future – Implications and Opportunities
Chapter 6: India’s COVID-19 Pandemic Aggravates Media Vs. Government Tensions: Theorizing Media Agendamelding in the World’s Largest Democracy
Deb Aikat 145
Chapter 7: Clearing the Air: Using Collaboration Technology to Build Local Engagement Panels on Air Quality
Kevin M. Esterling and Cesunica E. Ivey 181
Chapter 8: The Miner of Last Resort: Digital Currency, Shadow Money and the Role of the Central Bank
Graham S. Steele 197
Afterword: Technology’s Thoughts on Technology: An Interview with ChatGPT-4.0 223

List of Figures and Tables

Figures

Fig. 1.1. State CIOs Organizational Models (Updated June 2020). 34
Fig. 2.1. Schematic of the 2006 Manhattan Bridge incident, involving southbound train SB1 (partly on the bridge, partly in a tunnel) facing a heavy smoke condition, and train SB2, which needed to be reversed to allow for the reversal of SB1. SB2 could not be reached via radio by Control, which was using the incorrect call numbers. Once communication with SB2 was established, however, firefighters had entered the subway tracks, which required an emergency power cut to protect the firefighters from the deadly third rail. The situation was thus transformed from one in which train SB1 might be reversed out of the smoke condition to one in which passengers had to be laboriously evacuated from a train stranded in heavy smoke with the assistance of 100 firefighters. Credit: Jacob Wall. 60
Fig. 3.1. Coyote Creek River Gauge at Edenvale, February 2017 as Floodwaters Approached. 85
Fig. 3.2. Coyote Creek River Gauge, Williams Rd., February 21, 2017. 86
Fig. 3.3. Coyote Creek at Edenvale, CYEC1. 87
Fig. 4.1. CDC Cluster. 116
Fig. 4.2. @CDCgov Network. 118
Fig. 4.3. #Coronavirus Network. 119
Fig. 4.4. #Coronavirus Clusters. 120
Fig. 6.1. Growth in Paid Circulation (in 1,000s) for Dailies, 2013–2015 for Seven Nations. 168
Fig. 6.2. The Cycle of Media Agendamelding: Interplay and Influence of Vertical and Horizontal Media Among Audiences. 172

Table

Table 4.1. Overview of Data. 114

About the Contributors

Deb Aikat, a former journalist, has been a faculty member since 1995 at the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media at UNC-Chapel Hill, USA. As an award-winning scholar, Dr. Aikat theorizes digital media in the global sphere. His research ranges across the media. He served as the 2022–2023 President of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, one of the premier scholarly organizations in the field. Born in India, Dr. Aikat worked as a journalist in India for the Ananda Bazar Patrika’s The Telegraph newspaper from 1984 through 1992. He also reported for the BBC World Service.

Cara A. Chiaraluce is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Santa Clara University. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Davis, and conducts research in the fields of medical sociology, gender and family, and carework and digital resources. Her manuscript titled Becoming an Expert Caregiver: Shifting Paradigms on Care & Disability through Autism Carework is currently in press with Rutgers University Press. Additional recent scholarly articles include: “A Social Diagnosis of Digitally Mediated COVID-19 Trauma” in American Behavioral Scientist (2022) and “Narratives on the Autism Journey: ‘Doing Family’ and Reconfiguring the Caregiver Self” in the Journal of Family Issues (2018).

Kevin M. Esterling is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, and Director of the Laboratory for Technology, Communication and Democracy, at the University of California, Riverside, USA. His research focuses on institutional design for communication in democratic politics, and he has interests in Bayesian statistics, experimental design, and science ethics and validity. He received his Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Chicago.

John Thomas Flynn was the first Chief Information Officer (CIO) for both the State of California and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and the former President of the National Association of State Chief Information Officers. Serving as a technology advisor to Governor Schwarzenegger’s transition team and the California Performance Review, a member of the US Government Accountability Office’s Information Technology Advisory Board, and a faculty member and advisory board member at several prestigious colleges and universities, including Drexel University and UC Berkeley, he is an acknowledged govtech leader and visionary. He has written and spoken extensively on effective government operations, and government’s ability and capacity to successfully manage its information technology assets. Prior to his State CIO service, he worked with systems integrators, leading teams designing and developing financial, statistical, and operational reporting application systems for public sector organizations throughout the United States. Mr. Flynn was also a While House appointee, serving in both the Reagan and GHW Bush Administrations.

Cesunica E. Ivey is Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Principal Investigator of the Air Quality Modeling and Exposure Lab at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. Her research centers on atmospheric modeling, source apportionment, data assimilation, exposure monitoring, and environmental justice applications. She earned her Ph.D. in Environmental Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Patrick Lanthier co-founded RIVERA/LANTHIER & Associates, a Silicon Valley-based technology and policy firm in 1997. At AT&T & BELL Labs, he was on early Cellular, Internet, and National Security & Emergency Preparedness teams. He co-founded New Ventures (total $1B) and advises 22 countries’ Emergency Communications Planners, the United Nations, the European Union, and the US Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, and State. He advised at Carnegie Mellon University, Santa Clara University, and both California’s Emerging Technology Fund and its Office of Emergency Services. He has led teams in more than 50 countries. His education includes California Polytechnic, San Francisco State, Golden Gate, Seton Hall, and The Wharton School. He testified in the US Congress and other venues.

“His maxim is: “From Chaos to Synergy, via Leadership, Innovation, and Collaboration”.

Lloyd Levine is Senior Policy Fellow at UC Riverside’s School of Public Policy and a former member of the California State Legislature. He served as Chair of the Assembly Committee on Utilities and Commerce, specializing in issues relating to electricity, renewable energy, telecommunications, broadband, and technology. He is the co-founder of the Center for Technology, Policy, and Society at UC Riverside’s School of Public Policy and a founding board member of the California Emerging Technology Fund. Through his work and academic publications, he has earned a reputation as a nationally recognized leader in government technology and policy. He was recently named “one of the 40 most thought-provoking innovators in New York city and state” by the prestigious New York City & State Magazine. He has appeared on television and radio programs across the country and has been published and cited widely in print media. He has also served as a panelist and keynote speaker at energy and technology conferences around the world. He has been a guest lecturer in many universities and law schools.

Noah McClain (Ph.D., New York University) is a sociologist with interests spanning the sociologies of cities, law, inequality, complex organizations, work, policing, and security, and how these intersect with technologies high and low. He has published a broad range of articles dealing with these topics in venues such as the Journal of Consumer Culture, Poetics, Information, Communication and Society, and American Behavioral Scientist. He has served on the faculties of Illinois Tech and the Bard Prison Initiative, where he was also a postdoctoral research fellow. Prior to academia, he was an investigator of police misconduct for the City of New York.

Laura Robinson is Professor in the Department of Sociology at Santa Clara University and Faculty Associate at the Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society. After earning her Ph.D. from UCLA, where she held a Mellon Fellowship in Latin American Studies, her other affiliations include the UC Berkeley Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, the Cornell University Department of Sociology, Department of Sociology at Trinity College Dublin, USC Annenberg Center, and the École Normale Supérieure. Her service positions include Series Co-Editor of Emerald Studies in Media & Communications and Palgrave Studies in Digital Inequalities, North American Coordinator of the Brazil–US Colloquium on Communication Research, Organizing Committee Member of the Media Sociology Symposium, Steering Committee Member of the Digital Sociology Thematic Group of the International Sociological Association, and CITAMS Section Chair 2014–2015. Her research has earned awards from CITASA, AOIR, and NCA IICD for her work on digital inequalities and digital sociology in Brazil, France, and the United States.

Catherine Sandoval is a tenured Law Professor at Santa Clara University, specializing in Communications and Energy law. She served in the US federal government as a Presidential-nominated, Senate Confirmed Board Member of the US Chemical Safety Board, and as Director of the FCC Office of Communications Business Opportunities. California Governors Brown and Davis appointed her as Commissioner of the California Public Utilities Commission, and Undersecretary of California’s Business, Transportation, and Housing Agency, She earned a B.A. from Yale University, a Master of Letters from Oxford University where she was a Rhodes Scholar, and a J.D. from Stanford Law School.

Graham S. Steele served as Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions at the US Department of the Treasury from 2021 to 2023. Prior to joining the Treasury Department, he was Director of the Corporations and Society Research Initiative at Stanford Graduate School of Business. From 2010 to 2017, he served in various capacities as a staff member for the US Senate Committee on Banking, Housing & Urban Affairs, including as Minority Chief Counsel from 2015 to 2017. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of Rochester and his Law degree from The George Washington University Law School.

Juliana Maria Trammel is Full Professor of Strategic Communication and Chair of the Department of Journalism & Mass Communications at Savannah State University. Her research interests include the intersection of gender, media, race and ethnicity, and human communication, with a special focus on social media, women, and early childhood communication. She is also an intercultural scholar with studies conducted in Brazil and the United States. Her most recent publications include a book chapter titled “The Lan-House Phenomenon: Exploring the Uses and Symbolic Functions of the Internet Among the Low-income Brazilian Youth” published in Mediated Millennials by Emerald Press (2020) and Color Privileges, Humor, and Dialogues by Palgrave/Macmillan Press (2018). She has also served as a contributing writer for PR News, a PR trade magazine. In addition to her scholarship, she has over 15 years of communication-related experience, including social advocacy on Capitol Hill, higher education administration, teaching, and consulting. She earned a Ph.D. in Communication and Culture from Howard University, an M.A. in Public Communication from American University, and a B.A. in Broadcast and Print Journalism from Rust College. She was born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Acknowledgments

I want to thank my family, starting with my wife Edie without whom none of this would be possible. Your support, assistance, and encouragement were and are invaluable. Thank you for giving me the time and space to pursue this gratifying project, and thank you for being my partner and my champion! Thank you also to my parents. Their sacrifices and prioritization of education throughout my early years were essential. Without the foundation of education and public service you provided, I would not be the person I am today. To my brother John, thank you for all the hours of conversations, texts, emails about technology, philosophy, and life. You have shaped and continue to shape my thinking in many ways. To my cousin Professor Barry Wellman, thank you for all your academic counsel and mentorship. This book would not have been possible without the opportunities you gave me and the powerful introductions you made to leading academics and researchers, and for that, I am eternally grateful. To my cousin, Bev Wellman, thank you for your input on key sections of this book. Your perspective and keen insights were very valuable.

I am also deeply grateful to several individuals who have been trusted friends, collaborators, advisors, and confidants. Two people are required to be at the top of this list: Professor Anil Deolalikar and Professor Laura Robinson. Without the opportunities and support from both of you, my academic endeavors would not be possible. Anil, thank you for asking me to coffee all those years ago, sharing your vision for the University of California, Riverside’s School of Public Policy, and asking me to be a part of that vision. Laura, since the day we met in San Diego, you have been a friend, collaborator, and advisor. Your confidence in me, the opportunities you provided me, and your collaboration allowed me to find my voice and the confidence in academic pursuits that I might not have otherwise. To the faculty and staff at the UC Riverside School of Public Policy, thank you all for your important contributions to the world of public policy and to the state and people of California. I am continually in awe of what you built and what you continue to build. Every day you all strive to make this state and this world a better place. Thank you for allowing me to play a small role along the way. To my friend, Professor Barbara O’Connor, thank you for all the years of friendship, support, and encouragement. First as my professor nearly 30 years ago and now as my colleague, confidant, advisor, and friend. I have enjoyed every minute and would not be here today without you. To Professor Rob Wassmer, thank you for the years of conversation and for being my go-to source and sounding board for economic policy questions. Thank you too for the many, many hours of long bike rides often featuring lengthy discussions of any number of public policy topics.

Finally, thank you to my co-authors and chapter authors in this book. I appreciate your hard work, dedication, expertise, and patience as we put this volume together.

Preface

Lloyd Levine

The genesis of the concepts explored throughout these pages – the collision of technology and government - came when I connected two independent, unrelated events that occurred 11 years apart. It was connecting those two “dots” that led to the creation of this book.

The first event occurred in 2003, when I was an Assembly member serving in the California State Legislature. That day, the Assembly’s Committee on Utilities and Commerce, of which I was a member (and would later go on to serve as Committee Chair), heard legislation – Assembly Bill 909 – which provided a very early preview of the kinds of issues addressed throughout this volume.

The legislation seemed innocuous enough, the stated purpose was to provide information to consumers by way of rate disclosures. Specifically, the bill wanted cell phone providers to provide rate information to consumers in the same way landline providers had. While this concept may be foreign to many who are reading this, prior to the advent of cell phones and advanced technologies, telecommunications (telephones) was a regulated industry. Providers made money based on usage. Calls were charged by time of day, length of call, and distance called. Night time calls and weekend calls were less expensive than daytime calls. Rates were applied per minute of connection, often with the first minute more expensive. Local calls – calls within the same area code or predefined territory – were the least expensive or free, long distance calls were more expensive, and international calls were the most expensive of all.

However, as competition came to telephony with the breakup of AT&T’s monopoly in 1982, this began to change. Companies now had to compete for customers. The advent of cell phones and new technologies drove competition further. This background sets the stage for the AB 909 hearing. The bill sought to statutorily force cell phone communications providers to disclose their long distance and local calling rates so consumers could conduct price comparisons when shopping for service. However, there was one problem.

What is normal today was cutting edge and innovative in 2003. Cellular phone companies were just starting to roll out their “one rate” plans. These plans gave customers an unlimited number of calls for a flat fee. You could call your next-door neighbor once, or across the country 100 times and your bill was the same. There was no “rate” to disclose. The advance of technology, and the innovation it enabled, ran headlong into legislation that was rooted in an old model of regulation. This point was raised by me and one other member of the committee, and eventually, after several minutes of explanations, the legislation was amended to take into account the technological reality.

For many years, that stood as an interesting anecdote or cautionary tale, but had no greater context in my mind. It wasn’t until years later the second event came about and allowed me to connect the dots of commonality between the two. The epiphanic moment was prompted by and occurred during an interview with the San Diego Union Tribune on a topic seemingly completely unrelated to technology.

In 2014, a reporter called to ask me about the effectiveness of a certain niche interest group. Specifically, he wanted to know if I had an explanation as to why the animal rights/animal welfare movement seemed to be increasing their effectiveness over the past number of years. Traditionally, the animal movement had been perceived as a bit outside the mainstream, and not particularly effective at achieving their legislative objectives. Recently that had begun to change.

I will admit, the question caught me a bit off guard and required me to think about it. In the end, I attributed it to two significant developments, one unique to the California State Legislature and non-replicable. The second factor, the advances in technology, are what I believe were the dominant factor in increasing the effectiveness of those trying to enact policy changes related to animal issues.

Advocates for animals today have access to media production and distribution tools that weren’t available in years past. Digital recording technology has progressed to the point that virtually all of society has access to affordable, easily concealable, and high definition video and audio recording equipment in the form of smartphones. Further, the availability of distribution channels provided by social media (Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, etc.) now allows for instant and direct publishing. Passionate animal advocates can easily and surreptitiously document instances of abuse or maltreatment. They can then broadcast them quickly and directly to policymakers and their staff, traditional media, and the public at large. Individuals had the metaphorical equivalent of the printing press and television studio in their pockets. The technology eliminated the need for the press to be an intermediary. The descriptions and assertions of abuse that seemed so unbelievable years earlier were now accompanied by visual proof. The industry no longer controlled the narrative and that forced people to confront disturbing images and issues that previously remained hidden. Technology transformed how an advocacy group engaged with policymakers, and more importantly, the technology dramatically increased their effectiveness.

I relate this story because it was the moment these issues crystallized in my mind in the way that would eventually lead to this book. And, since then this concept has played itself out in multiple ways at multiple levels of government, usually due to some sort of embarrassing public issue that resulted from public officials not understanding the power and impact of technology. Issues and occurrences that would have gone unreported or at worst denied and forgotten were now verified, documented, and amplified through the use of technology.

It took 11 years to connect the first two “dots,” but since that time, I have seen these issues manifest themselves in myriad ways, some innocuous others more serious. Generally, these manifestations are split into two categories:

  • (1)

    Political

  • (2)

    Policy and operational/administrative.

The political are usually more humorous and while more public, actually less impactful to the day-to-day operations of Government. Some examples of public but innocuous examples culled from my memory include, the late Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska drawing much ridicule for his attempt – on camera on the senate floor – to explain the internet to his colleagues. Or the belief by any politician that comments in any kind of public or semi-private gathering won’t be recorded and spread across the internet. From thought-to-be clandestine sexual matters to Mitt Romney’s 47% comment to an audience at a “private” event, politicians found their images and remarks scattered across the country for all to see.

Instances of technology and politics colliding also have some important repercussions. The widespread profusion of recording and distribution methods is forcing politicians and others to reconcile the difference between their preferred narrative and the reality presented by the visual and audio evidence. Think of President Trump’s first Press Secretary, Sean Spicer holding a press conference after the inauguration and trying to convince a room full of reporters that President Trump’s inauguration had more people in attendance than President Obama’s when they could plainly and unambiguously see for themselves that it wasn’t true. Or, more consequentially, in the lead up to the 2012 United States presidential election where candidate Mitt Romney was on videotape stating he was, “a severely conservative Republican Governor” when he was trying to win the his party’s nomination. But he was also recorded, in a different time and location, saying he was a very moderate governor of Massachusetts. While many things contributed to his loss to President Obama, the incongruity of his words, on video, prevented him from controlling the narrative and cause voters to see him as pandering.

Over and over again in public statements in response to multitudes of circumstances, it is blatantly apparent that many politicians do not yet grasp how pervasive technology is, how it truly works, and what its potential is - positive and negative. The collision of technology and government in this way will continue to cause severe cognitive dissonance and/or force people to confront facts that counter their preferred narratives.

There exists an alternative and potentially dangerous way in which technology will impact politics. With each passing year, audio and video editing technologies improve by quantum leaps. Without their consent or knowledge, people can be added to or removed from videos with such precision that only trained experts can spot the fakes. And now Artificial Intelligence technologies exist that can make it appear that someone said something or gave a speech they never did. These videos are extremely convincing, and the technology is only in its infancy. The potential impact these technologies can have on democracy, government, and society is profound and troubling.

However, the impact of technology on politics isn’t the topic of this volume. This volume is looking at the intersection of technology and government; government separate and distinct from politics. People run for office and by dint of that, they become politicians and engage in politics. But they are running to govern, to lead, to enact policies, and, ideally, to solve problems. This is the aspect of government on which this volume focuses, the intersection of technology and the policies and administration of government as a whole. This intersection can and does manifest itself in myriad ways, both positively and negatively.

While people generally think of technology as the internet, apps, smartphones, and computers, this book takes an expansive definition of technology’s impact on and intersection with government extending far beyond that limited perspective. Hundreds if not thousands of viable, different, and new digital and physical technologies are available to government decision-makers and administrators. The choice to adopt or reject each of those technologies has implications for the administrative functions of government.

***

While this is a book about technology and government, at its heart it is really about people. Before we delve into the nitty gritty of various government technology failures and the future of technology and government, I want to take just a few hundred words to center this book on the people served by both government and technology. Technology in the public sector takes many forms. There are technologies that allow employees to perform the core functions of their jobs more efficiently. There are technologies that allow governments to reallocate resources to other priorities. There are technologies the public at large never sees or touches. And then there are those consumer facing technologies, websites, apps, kiosks, and any number of other technologies that need to be accessed by individuals from all parts of society. It is the individuals who utilize these services who I want to singularly call out in this section, lest they be overlooked in the focus on the technology. These technologies exist for the benefit of the people and that is where the focus must be.

Abraham Lincoln, in extolling the uniqueness of the American Democracy in the midst of the Civil War declared, “… that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth.” The phrase, “…, of the people, by the people, and for the people …” is the concept to keep in mind as you read this book. While it is easy to decry the monolith that many perceive government to be, it is important to remember that government in America is nuanced. Government is the federal government and state legislatures, but it is also counties and cities large and small, town councils, school districts, and special districts. Those bureaucratic institutions that combine to form the network of American government are made up of the people of the country - ordinary citizens, friends and neighbors, and people we pass on the street - and operate for the benefit of us and our friends and neighbors.

In most democratically governed, developed countries that concept is part of the social compact, that when governments provide goods or services, they MUST be provided to all who need them. However, despite being part of that social compact, that notion isn’t always something that appears commonly understood. More than a few argue that government must operate more like a business. This is where the tension lies between the object and purpose of government as opposed to the private sector. While both the public and private sectors strive to eliminate unnecessary inefficiencies, for governments there may be inefficiencies inherent in making sure everyone is served. When thinking about government services and responsibilities, it is essential to understand that eliminating inherent inefficiencies could deprive individuals of certain necessary government provided goods and services. This is easier to see with social service benefits to vulnerable populations but is also ingrained in other aspects of government functions.

For our purposes, the transportation network is an excellent analog to the issue of technology and government. The transportation system comprised of inanimate constituent parts – concrete, asphalt, road signs, traffic lights, streetlights, curbs, paint, crosswalks, etc. – that all come together for the purpose of conveying people and goods. Trillions of dollars have been spent to build and maintain a vast highway and road network across the country. But what of the thousands of small towns and unincorporated areas at the end of long, rural roads miles from the nearest two-lane highway, and even further from the major highways and cities? Each of those roads cost tens of millions to build, and millions more to maintain. But, at the risk of being overly didactic, those roads connect rural houses and farms and other isolated pockets of industries to the bigger cities. The cost per user ratio is significantly lower in urban and suburban areas, but the economic and societal benefits of connecting rural communities to larger areas is recognized, resulting in governments funding the construction even at the significantly greater per capita. And what about low-income households who cannot afford a reliable car? For them, there is a public transit system to ensure they are not disenfranchised from the benefits of mobility. At its heart, the transportation system is built by the people and for the people. Without people, the roads lack a purpose.

Technology is conceptually similar in that ensuring equal access to benefits and services may come at the cost of maximized efficiency. People may intuitively understand things like transportation – and to an even greater degree health care – are for the benefit of the people who will be the users/consumers. In contrast, it seems easy to become so enamored with the capabilities of technology that we lose sight of the ultimate purpose of the technology. In the public sphere, excellent, innovative new technology that excludes a large percentage of the population is not appropriately beneficial. Technological solutions that can ascribe benefits to all who need them and ensure that all who need them can access them should be the goal. In that paradigm, it is the people who are primary.

This is a concept that is best exemplified in the persistent digital divide. According to reliable data from the Pew Center, approximately 25% of Americans lack “meaningful internet access” (Levine, 2018). Governments continue to migrate an increasing number of services online, and correspondingly reduce in-person or telephone transactions, in order to obtain and provide the efficiency benefits technology confers. However, those without the means to access the technology may be left in a worse condition than before. The technologically fluent and connected may extoll the virtues of being able to engage digitally at the time of their choosing. But those without means of connecting or with poor digital literacy skills – usually lower income households, rural households, and seniors – may find themselves with fewer government service offices and fewer staff at those offices as offices are eliminated and staff positions reassigned to correspond with reduced demand for in-person services drops due to the behavior shift - to digital engagement - of the connected.

The creators of the constituent facing technological solutions, and the government that procures them must understand that while the benefits to some will increase, those who lack connectivity, digital literacy skills, and government fluency will not be able to obtain the same benefits. This isn’t to say that operating parallel systems is the answer. Rather, this speaks to the need to expand the technological capabilities and access of the end users. Would society accept a transportation system that provides benefits to 75% of the population while stranding and isolating the other 25%? Then why should it be acceptable with the phase in of technology by governments? Nowhere is this better illustrated than the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting shift to distance learning which starkly revealed the gaps and inequities of technology in education. Across the country, those previously unaware of the digital divide quickly that while some households have multiple devices and gigabit internet service, others have only a smartphone or no service at all. Upon recognizing the situation, to the greatest extent possible, schools didn’t neglect the disconnected or create an inferior system for them. At the outset of the pandemic, schools and school districts across the United States provided students with millions of laptops and worked with internet providers to ensure those students had access. This same principle should be applied in general when it comes to government employed technologies. As governments increasingly integrate technology, and shift to eGovernment, it is incumbent upon them to ensure everyone has means to access the information and services. It does no good to create a suite of benefits for lower income households and vulnerable individuals and then force them to access the benefits through website or app for which they have neither the physical connectivity nor the digital literacy necessary. Further, ensuring technological access and fluency to those who cannot afford the necessary devices doesn’t just accrue benefits to the recipients of the devices, it makes government more efficient as it can allocate resources to truly engage in a digital transformation. Society at large is also improved as the level of technology fluency and access of the entire population is lifted. This will have economic and other benefits far beyond accessing government services and institutions.

While some of the research in this volume paints a clear picture of the real-world impacts of the failures of government to adequately purchase, implement, or employ technology, in other chapters those failures are abstracted from their purposes and really devoid of the consequences of the failures. And still other chapters look to the future and examine the possibilities and implications of the collision between a government that is slow to understand, adapt, and implement and a technology industry that is barreling ahead with each new technology announced seemingly before the last one has been deployed. Likewise, some of those works place people at the forefront – the use of collaboration technology to increase the quality and quantity of true community engagement makes clear the impact on people. Other research – the regulatory circumstances of cryptocurrency – makes scant direct linkage to the end users.

While reading these chapters, whether explicit or not, the underlying principle of the works is the impact on people. The people who work for and interact with government now and in the future are the unseen characters and main protagonists of a play unfolding in real time. They will succeed or struggle based on how well the producers and procurers of technologies understand the technology and keep a focus on the users.

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The authors of the research presented in this book were tasked with examining various aspects of the intersection of government and technology, including why government fails at technology purchases and why government lags behind the private sector on innovation and implementation. They were tasked with exploring the challenges of providing digital government services when large percentages of the population lack digital connectivity and digital literacy skills, and how the digitally disconnected are impacted by their lack of access. As more and more services are pushed online, how does government serve those on the wrong side of the digital divide who cannot fully take advantage of eGovernment services? Authors were tasked with examining how technology has changed the way government, particularly local or state governments, provide services.

The authors were presented the objective of making their papers universally applicable, concluding the research by distilling and elucidating big lessons and principles. The chapters in this book focus on specific issues and cases and while having pertinence to entities and on issues far beyond those discussed in this volume.

Finally, this book is intended to be a starting point for the academic and scholarly examination of the intersection of technology and government. The goal of this book is to break new ground in public policy and administration research. The current academic landscape surrounding intersection of technology and government, specifically public policy and administration, is mostly lacking. Issues around social media, data, and privacy have spurred some policy programs to include technology related subject matter, but the examination of technology policy in that realm is different from the issues explored in this volume. For example, current procurement policies can be antiquated and antithetical to the way technology is adopted, but procurement policies are not generally studied in policy or administration programs. Another, more concrete example occurred in April 2023 when Elon Musk changed the Twitter logo to the Dogecoin logo driving the price of Dogecoin up by 30%. This and other similar incidents show clearly that social media can impact stock prices, and by extension the regulatory process of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Policy schools - as well as policy makers and regulators - may want to consider the way social media changes the nature of information distribution and its concordant impact on policy goals and outcomes. This is a topic discussed directly and indirectly in Chapters 4, 6, and 8 of this book. These are just two of many areas technology impacts or is impacted by policy and administration. Yet, as of the writing of this book, most public policy programs focus on course work related to policy analysis and creation with no examination of the interplay and tension between technology and public policy, particularly policy implementation or the myriad ways in which technology may assist in achieving policy goals. Similarly, public administration courses and programs focus on understating the structure and operation of bureaucratic entities. These courses also generally neglect to examine the impacts of technology on the administration of policies and programs, or the bureaucracy itself. As such, it is my hope that this book starts a conversation and creates change in both policy and administration programs beyond social media, data, privacy, and ethics, and ultimately how governmental entities approach and understand technology.