Weekly Round-up: December 10, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

 

Weekly Round-up: December 03, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

 

Weekly Round-up: November 19, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

 

Weekly Round-up: November 12, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

Weekly Round-up: November 5, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

 

Weekly Round-up: October 29, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

Government Managers' Guide to Citizen 2.0

Over the past few weeks, I’ve written about the other half of Gov 2.0: Citizen 2.0.  My goal has been twofold: first, to help citizens understand that engaging government isn’t all-or-nothing.  Citizens can participate in meaningful ways both from home and outside it.  They can work in and for their community by themselves and as a team effort with their neighbors.  They can engage in civic activity by putting on work gloves, writing insightful comments on blogs (with links, please!), or writing code.

Weekly Round-up: October 22, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda
  • You have a friend request from DHS! Federal Computer Week is reporting that the Department of Homeland Security encouraged its employees to friend or follow applicants for citizenship.
John Kamensky
  • Front Row Seat in ROWE.

Weekly Round-up: October 15, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda
  • Salon interviews Steven Johnson, the author of "Where Good Ideas Come From," who argues that what we need to focus on is making incremental changes rather than trying to achieve singular epiphanies or game-changing brakthroughs.

Weekly Round-up: October 8, 2010

Gadi Ben-Yehuda

Pages

Innovation Fellow, Emeritus
IBM Center for The Business of Government
600 14th Street, NW Second Floor
Washington, DC 20005
United States

Gadi Ben-Yehuda was our Innovation Fellow for the Center for The Business of Government. In the five years that Mr. Ben-Yehuda was with the Center, he was a speaker, panelist and moderator for events with State Department, Department of Labor, Department of Defense, General Services Administration, and other agencies. He also delivered presentations both nationally and internationally, at SxSW Interactive Festival in Austin, TX, the Global eGovernment Forum in Seoul, South Korea, and conferences in venues ranging from Washington, DC, to New York City, and Las Vegas, NV, to Burlington, VT. He was a prolific writer, with articles appearing on the Center’s blog, in Government Executive and Fast CoExist. He is active on Facebook, Twitter, and Vine. Mr. Ben-Yehuda has worked on the Web since 1994, when he received an email from Maya Angelou through his first Web site. He has an MFA in poetry from American University, has taught writing at Howard University, and has worked in Washington, DC, for nonprofits, lobbying organizations, Fleishman-Hillard Global Communications, and Al Gore's presidential campaign. Prior to his current position, Gadi was was a Web Strategist for the District of Columbia's Office of the chief Technology Officer (OCTO). Additionally, Gadi has taught creative, expository, and Web writing for more than 10 years to university students, private-sector professionals, and soldiers, including Marines at the Barracks at 8th and I in Washington, DC. Gadi is also a member of ACT-IAC.