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A Field of Their Own

BY Nancy Scola | Friday, October 22 2010

Are women better at gov 2.0? Gartner analysts and frequent open government commentator Andrea Di Maio floated that conclusion at a recent Gartner Symposium, and he writes that he was surprised that some people didn't seem to agree:

My comment about women and government 2.0 is rooted in how many interactions with female CIO and IT leaders have shown a better appreciation of the potential of these technologies, but also a smarter way of striking a balance between internal vs. external collaboration and the blurring of boundaries between the two.

I do not mean to say that men do not get it. On the other hand, while there seems to be an overwhelming majority of men among the government 2.0 evangelist community (some of whom may have been offended by my observation), women on the government 2.0 implementation side (i.e. not those who preach, but those who have to deploy and use these technologies) seem to be faster and nimbler in getting to the bottom of it.

I, for one, am not sure what to make of this yet. While panels on the topic do tend to be abundantly male, there's some anecdotal evidence that Di Maio's onto something. GSA's top people on gov 2.0 (Bev Godwin, Sheila Campbell) are female, as are a number of new media directors at the various agencies, including the State Department, the Justice Department, and HHS. But is it a greater representation of women than you see in operational capacities throughout government? Or in civil service in general? Dunno. Anyway, food for thought.

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