Innovation Conference

Innovation Conference: Ottawa, 2002 (PDF)

1. The Innovation Conference planning committee

The Innovation Conference (PDF)

The Innovation Conference Program
Planning Committee meets:

Every two weeks as of Monday, March 19, 2001,
from 12 noon to 2:00 pm at:

Public Policy Forum
130 Albert Street, Suite 1615 (16th Floor),
between Metcalfe and O’Connor
Tel: 238-7860 (reception)

Chaired by: Eleanor Glor
For more information contact: Glor.Eleanor@ic.gc.ca

 

Revised October 01, 2001

 

2. Consultation

3. Innovation Conference (PDF)

 

Meeting the Challenge of Innovation in Government

February 11& 12, 2002 Ottawa Congress Center

There is no doubt that organizations today are operating under continuous change. In an
environment of technological advances and globalization, world-class organizations,
including governments, must remain relevant and effective. Reliance on incremental change
is insufficient; there must be a capacity for break-through innovation.

The enormous innovation challenges facing the public sector are numerous and the risks
are great. However, external and internal factors clearly require new and different
approaches to doing the business of government.

As a participant, you will:

  • Learn how to construct strategic innovative change within government;
  • Understand how to build and support a work environment that will encourage both adaptive
    and innovative changes;
  • Learn what motivates team members to participate in innovation;
  • Have the opportunity to develop a mutual understanding between fellow professionals on how
    to support innovation.

This conference will be of interest to:

  • Senior government executives and managers committed to innovative change
  • Organizational
    effectiveness consultants
  • Academics and other advisors working to improve the public sector.

This conference will give executives and managers the tools to:

  • Build and create a work environment in which innovation can grow
  • Design a plan to motivate team members to participate in innovation, and
  • Show you how to develop a mutual understanding between fellow professionals in order to
    support innovation

Click here for a list of the world-renowned speakers
you will be hearing from.

Click here for more information and to register.

Revised March 13, 2002

 

4. Three Great Government Innovation Events, Coming in February 2002! (PDF)

Register now!


A Workshop of Peer-Reviewed Papers
including the top Canadian academics working in French and
English, international academics, and some of the top public and private
sector practitioners of innovation world-wide.

February 9 and 10, 2002, 8:30-5pm.

University of Ottawa, Senate Chambers, Tabaret Hall

Registration fee: $50

Further information, a copy of the
program, and copies of papers are posted at: http://www.innovation.cc
under Innovation Workshop on the lefthand side.

Registration: Paul Crookall (613)
565-7117; email: paulcrookall@sympatico.ca

The Innovation Salon featuring the one person I would like most to hear on innovation.

Everett M. Rogers, “What I Have
Learned in 40 Years of Research on Innovation”.

Everett Rogers discovered the S-curve
pattern of innovation adoption and was instrumental in turning study of
innovation from a focus on the traits of innovators to an emphasis on
case studies. Author of The
Diffusion of Innovations
, now in its fourth printing, he has
developed a data base of more than 1000 innovations, which he has
studied in depth.

The Courtyard Restaurant

Saturday, February 9
2002

5:30 to 9pm. Registration fee: $10

Information: http://www.innovation.cc
under Salon

Registration: Eleanor Glor (613)
954-8575; Glor.Eleanor@ic.gc.ca

 

CCMD Meeting the Challenge of
Innovation in Government Conference

with top international speakers:

Mr. Daryl Conner, CEO and President
ODR-USA Inc.
Dr. Everett M. Rogers, author of “The Diffusion of
Innovations

Dr. Michael Kirton, developer of the Kirton Adaption-Innovation Theory

Mr. Jean David, former VP Marketing of le Cirque du Soleil

Mr. William Sturner, author of “Impact: Transforming Your
Organization”

The Congress Centre

February 11 and 12, 8:30 to 6:30pm.

Registration fee: $695 plus taxes/registration_e.html

Information: http://www.ccmd-ccg.gc.ca/events/conferences/innovation2002/index_e.html

Registration: http://www.ccmd-ccg.gc.ca/events/conferences/innovation2002

 

Revised February

02 2002

 

 

Revised February

25 2002

 

 

The Innovation Journal: The Public Sector Innovation Journal, 6(2), 2001, article 9.

 

Workshop of Peer-Reviewed Papers on Public Sector Innovation (PDF)

1. Call for Papers on Public Sector Innovation (PDF)

Papers are invited in the areas of:

  • individual and organizational creativity,
  • the innovation process in government,
  • the context for public service innovation (organizational and societal),
  • the ethics of innovation (policy, administration and process),
  • performance measurement and evaluation.

Papers are invited from professors, graduate students and practitioners. Selected
papers will be published in The Innovation Journal

( www.innovation.cc ).

Participants are responsible for their own costs, but an effort is being made to raise
a subsidy.

The deadline for proposals is October 25, 2001. Proponents will be informed whether
their papers have been accepted by November 15th. Please send communications
and proposals to glor@magma.ca.

Please feel free to forward this Call for Papers to others.

Revised October 15, 2001

 

2. Workshop Details (PDF)

A two-day Workshop of peer-reviewed papers on public sector innovation will be held
Saturday and Sunday, February 9 and 10, 2002, at the University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
The Workshop is being held just before a Conference on Innovation February 11 and 12,
2002, at the Congress Centre. The Conference is the result of a partnership among the
Canadian Centre for Management Development, Government of Canada; Ecole nationale
d’administration publique (ENAP) in Hull, Quebec; The Innovation Journal; and the
Innovation Salon.

The Peer-Reviewed Workshop on February 9th and 10th
is the result of a partnership among The Innovation Journal, the University of Ottawa,
Carleton University, ENAP and the City of Ottawa. The location is noted below. Papers that
have been approved through the peer-reviewed process are due January 3, 2002, and will be
posted in The Innovation Journal under Innovation Workshop and in La Revue de
l’innovation under Atelier sur l’innovation. Observers are welcome. The fee is
$50 Canadian.

Peer-Reviewed Workshop on Public Sector Innovation

Saturday and Sunday, February 9 and 10, 2002
8:30am to 5:00pm
The Senate Chambers,
Room 083 (Basement), Tabaret Hall
University of Ottawa
550 Cumberland Street, Ottawa

Registration in advance. Fee: $50

Please register for the Workshop with the Canadian Centre for Management Development
at: http://www.ccmd-ccg.gc.ca/ events/conferences/index_e.html http://publications.gc.ca/collections/Collection/BT31-2-1998-III-90E.pdf http://publications.gc.ca/site/archivee-archived.html?url=http://publications.gc.ca/collections/Collection/BT31-2-1998-III-90E.pdf
under Meeting the Challenge of Innovation in Government or with Eleanor Glor (below)

The Innovation Salon

Saturday, February 9, 2002, 5:30 to 9pm

Innovation Salon with Everett M. Rogers, the dean of innovation studies, author of The
Diffusion of Innovations,
and Chair, Department of Communications, University of New
Mexico

The Courtyard Restaurant, 21 George, 241-1516. In the Byward Market, in the first block
East of Sussex, behind The Bay and Chapters, in a courtyard on the North side of George
St.

Cost: Registration $10 plus $25 for dinner. Gratuity not included.

Register with Eleanor Glor (below)

For more information, contact:

Eleanor Glor
Editor-in-Chief
The Innovation Journal: The Public Sector Innovation Journal

Revised December 09, 2001

 

3. Workshop Logistics (PDF)

Location:

Ottawa is located about five hours northeast of Toronto, and about
two hours northwest of Montreal. January and February are the coldest months of the
year–bring your warmest clothes.

Ottawa, the national capital of Canada, will be celebrating its Winter Carnival at the
time of the Innovation Workshop (February 9 and 10) and the Innovation Conference
(February 11 and 12). So, bring your skates! Or rent some on The Canal, and skate the
longest skating rink in the world.

Air Travel

Air Canada flights to Ottawa may
be booked online.

Information on visa
requirements
for visiting Canada can be found on the
Internet.

Nearby Places to Stay:

Gasthaus Switzerland Inn (22 rooms). A
heritage site.
(3 blocks north and east of the Workshop site & the closest site to the Workshop)
89 Daly Avenue
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6E6
Phone:613-237-0335
1-888-663-0000
Fax:613-594-3327

–cost: $88 to 228/night plus taxes

You can register electronically (rates show as
less expensive at this site) – click on Ontario, then Ottawa, then Gasthaus
Switzerland.

Novotel Ottawa Hotel
(about six blocks from the Workshop site)
33 Nicholas
01-613-230-3033
1-800-668-6835 (no charge in USA and Canada)

Internet
registration

Single: $179 plus taxes of 12%= 200.00
Internet rate is less: $150 plus taxes

Westin Hotel
(located next door to the Congress Centre, where the Conference on Innovation is being
held)
11 Colonel By Drive (about five blocks from the Workshop)
$120 to 500/night

Register
online for all of these hotels/bed and breakfast locations at:

If you are planning to attend the Conference as well as the Workshop, the closest
places to stay are the Westin Hotel and the Novotel. The Westin is connected to the
Congress Centre, where the Conference on Innovation is being held, and the Novotel is
about a block away from the Westin. The Workshop site is approximately five blocks
Southeast of the Congress Centre, while the Gasthaus is approximately four blocks East of
the Congress Centre. The Gasthaus Bed and Breakfast is the closest location to the
Workshop.

Exchange rate: The Canadian dollar is worth approximately .63 of an
American dollar

Revised

December 09, 2001

 

4. Workshop Papers (PDF)

Published in Adobe Acrobat format. Instructions for downloading Adobe Acrobat
are available at:

http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/admin/instruce.html

Delivering Results Through Quality: The Ontario PublicService Reaps the Benefits of its Quality Service Strategy by Lois Bain, Mazlin Darsi and Jackie Stothers (12/01/02)

Incentives to Innovation inDevelopment Governance: Some Aspects of Information System Designing
by Parthasarathi Banerjee (16/01/02)

Innovations in WorkforceManagement: The Electronic Learning Record, Prior Learning Assessment, and Human CapitalAccounting
by Kathryn Barker (12/01/02)

From Cheerleaders to DartsPlayers: User Evaluation of Caseworkers as Performance Measurement
by Steen Bengtsson and Janika Wiene (08/01/02)

Strategic Innovationsin Post-Conflict Situations: Comparative Use of Large-Group StakeholderInteraction Methods: New Definitions, New Alliances and the Triumph ofOptimism
by Jeanne-Marie Col (07/02/02)

The Context for Public ServiceInnovation: The Case of the Italian National Railroad Company
by Eugenio Corti and Alfonso Marino (07/01/02)

Ontario Delivers Innovation
by Mary Anne Covelli and Maria Cece (16/01/02)

The New Paradigm: DonorOwnership of Patient Rights Through Contract Law
by Lawrence Dick (03/01/02)

Jürgen Habermas’ Concept of Universal Pragmatics: A Practical Approach to Ethics and Innovation
by Howard Doughty (05/02/02)

An EmpoweringApproaching to Measuring Quality in Social Care Services in England
by Monica Dowling (18/02/02)

The Internet as a Metaphor forthe Role of the Modern Government Laboratory
by Ron Freedman (21/01/02)

Innovation Traps: Risksand Challenges in Thinking About Innovation
by Eleanor Glor (03/01/02)

The Ethics of Innovation and the Development of Innovative Projects
by Ian Greene (27/01/02)

You’ve Got to Conform to Create:The Implications of Corporate Culture on Innovation in the Canadian Federal Public Service

by Donald Hall (07/01/02)

The Ethics of Innovations inAlternative Service Delivery: The Case of the Management of Canada’s Irradiated NuclearFuel
by Genevieve Fuji Johnson (08/01/02)

Practical QualityMeasurement
by Brenda Kirtzinger (03/01/02)

The Experiences from Transformingthe Ministry of Trade and Industry in Denmark into a Development Oriented Organization

by Birgit Kjølby (08/01/02)

Innovating A New Way for Measuring theHealth of Aboriginal Communities
by David Leech, F. Henry Lickers, and George Haas (05/02/02)

Rethinking E-Government:Dilemmas of Public Service, Citizenship and Democracy in the Digital Age
by Graham Longford (21/01/02)

Federal-ProvincialBusiness Registry Services and Payment System: Offering ElectronicInter-jurisdictional Services Based on Business Needs
by Stuart MacLean (07/02/02)

Classic Theories – ContemporaryApplications: A Comparative Study of the Implementation of Innovation in Canadian andChinese Public Sector Environments
by Michael Miles and Arun Thangaraj (21/01/02)

Design: The Somewhat Unknown but KeyIngredient in Innovation
by Glen Milne (05/02/02)

Patent Ownership and Rewards forInventions in Japanese Public Research Organizations
by Ichiro Nakamaya (08/01/02)

Individual and OrganizationalCreativity
by Christina Patterson (12/01/02)

A Topographical Map of theInnovation Landscape
by V.E. Ross and A.W. Kleingeld (12/01/02)

Ethics inInnovation: Power (Electricity) Sector Reforms in India with SpecialReference to the Rajasthan State
by Pradeep Saxena (07/02/02)

Restructuring Schools UsingLearning Technologies – Four Challenges for the Teaching Profession
by Ken Stevens and David Dibbon (21/01/02)

The Reality ofInnovation in Government
by Nada Teofilovic (27/01/02)

Can Parliaments Take Part in theInnovation Process?
by Paula Tiihonen (21/01/02)

Governance, Synergistic Power andCoaching: Towards the Democratic Organization
by Aida Warah (21/01/02)

 

EN FRANÇAIS: 1a

Innovation et entrepreneurship dans le secteur public au Canada
par Luc Bernier (18/02/02)

Innovations et fonctionpublique: des efforts louables; un arrimage difficile
par Denis Harrisson (21/01/02)

 

Published March 7 2002

 

 

5. Register
for the Workshop : Email paulcrookall@sympatico.ca

 

6. Workshop on PublicSector Innovation – Final Program

 

 

Workshop on Public Innovation (PDF)

 

Location:

The Senate Chambers,
Room 083 (Basement), Tabaret Hall
University of Ottawa
550 Cumberland Street
(Entrance either off Cumberland Ave. or off Waller)
Ottawa

Saturday February 9, 2002.

7:55 am

Registration, coffee and muffins

8:25 am

Introductory Remarks

Eleanor Glor, Workshop Chair

Papers

Chair

Morning Session 1

8:30 am

Innovation Processes:

Strategic Innovation in Post-Conflict Situations:
Comparative Use of Large-Group Interaction Methods –society-wide
action through invention of new definitions, creation of new
alliances, and the triumph of optimism.

Jeanne-Marie Col, Interregional Adviser, Division
of Public Economics and Public Administration, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United
Nations

Vic Pakalnis, Regional Director-Eastern

Ontario , Ontario Ministry of Labour

Innovating a New Way for Measuring the Health of
Aboriginal Communities

David J Leech, Doctoral Candidate, Department of
Political Science, University of Ottawa; F. Henry Lickers, Director,
Department of Environment, Mohawk Council of Akwesasne; George Haas,
Research Associate, Institute of the Environment, University of
Ottawa

9:45 am

Break

Morning Session 2

10:05 am

Improving Service:

Federal-Provincial Business Registry Services:
Offering Electronic Inter-jurisdictional Services Based on Business
Needs

David Stuewe, Chief Executive Officer; Stuart
Maclean, Vice President of Assessment and Risk Management Services,
Workers’ Compensation Board, Nova Scotia, Canada; and Katherine
Bennett, Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, Ottawa, Canada.

Dawn Nicholson-O’Brien, Chair of the Conference
Meeting the Challenge of Innovation in Government and Senior
Visiting Fellow, Knowledge Creation and Innovation, Canadian Centre
for Manage-ment Development (invited)

 

Delivering Results through Quality: the Ontario
Public Service reaps the benefits of its Quality Service Strategy

 

Lois A. Bain, Director, Quality Service, Ontario
Public Service Restructuring Secretariat, Cabinet Office, Government
of Ontario

 

Rethinking E-Government: Dilemmas of Public Service,
Citizenship and Democracy

 

 

Graham D. Longford, Department of Political Studies,
Trent University

 

 

11:35 am

 

 

Lunch

 

After-noon Session

12:15 pm

 

Innovative Concepts

 

A Topographical Map of the Innovation Landscape

 

 

 

A.W. Kleingeld, Centre for Process Engineering,
University of Stellenbosch, South Africa

 

Robert Slater, Assistant Deputy Minister, Environ-ment
Canada

 

Ethics in Innovation:-Power (Electricity) Sector
Reforms in India with Special reference to the Rajasthan State
(India)

 

Dr.Pradeep K. Saxena, Assistant Professor of Public
Administration, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India

 

 

The Internet as a Metaphor for the Role of the
Modern Government Laboratory

 

Ron Freedman, The Impact Group, Toronto,
Canada

 

1:45 pm

 

Short Break

 

After-noon Session 2

1:55 pm

 

 

The Public and the Private in Innovation:

 

Patent Ownership and Reward for Invention in
Japanese Research Organization

 

 

 

Ichiro Nakayama, Visiting Associate Professor,
Department of Intellectual Property, Research Center for Advanced
Science and Technology, University of Tokyo, and Fellow, Research
Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry.

 

Val Traversy, Director General, Industrial Analysis
and Strategies, Industry Canada

 

 

 

Governance, Coaching and Synergistic Power: Towards
the Democratic Organization

 

Aïda A. Warah, School of Psychology, University of
Ottawa, and Public Service Learning and Leadership, Treasury Board
Secretariat, Government of Canada

 

Risks and Challenges in Thinking About Innovation

 

Eleanor Glor, Editor-in-Chief, The Innovation
Journal: The Public Sector Innovation Journal (www.innovation.cc)

 

3:25 pm

 

Short Break

 

After-noon Session 3

3:35 pm

 

 

New Technologies:

 

Restructuring Schools Using Learning Technologies
– Four Challenges for the Teaching Profession

 

 

 

Ken Stevens & David Dibbon, Centre for
TeleLearning and Rural Education, Faculty of Education, Memorial
University of Newfoundland, Canada

 

 

Everett Rogers, Univ. of New Mexico

 

Design: The Somewhat Unknown but Key Ingredient in
Innovation

 

Glen Milne, GLEN
MILNEboth, Ottawa, Canada

 

The Ethics of Innovation

 

Ian Greene, York University, Toronto

 

5:05 pm

 

Wrap-up, Workshop Rapporteur

 

Leslie A. Pal, Professor and Director, School of
Public Policy and Administration, Carleton University

 

 

5:20

 

 

Closing for the Day

 

5:40pm

 

Cash Bar

The Innovation Salon

The Courtyard Restaurant in The Byward Market

 

 

Everett M. Rogers, author, The Diffusion of
Innovations
; Chair, Department of Communications, University of
New Mexico

 

 

Eleanor Glor

 

 

Sunday February 10,
2002.

Breakfast

7:55 am

Coffee and muffins

Opening

8:35am

Opening Remarks

Morning Session 1

8:30 am

Thinking About Innovation:

Jurgen Habermas’ Concept of Universal Pragmatics:
A Practical Approach to Ethics and Innovation

Howard Doughty, Professor, Seneca College of Arts
and Technology.

Luc Bernier, Ecole nationale d’administra-tion
publique

The Reality of Innovation in Government

Nada Teofilovic, Human Resources Development
Canada, Government of Canada, Ottawa

Practical Quality Measurement

Brenda Kirtzinger, Director of Performance and
Evaluation/Quality of Care Coordinator, Battlefords Health District

Break

10:00am

Break

Morning Session 2

10:20am

(Parallel Session)

Conflicting Objectives:

The Experiences from Transforming the Ministry of
Trade and Industry in Denmark into a Development-Oriented
Organization

Birgit Kjølby, Head of Division,

Ministry of Science, Technology and Development,
Government of Denmark.

Paul Crookall, co-author of The Three Pillars
of Public Management

Incentives to Innovation in Development
Governance: Some Aspects of Information System Designing

Parthasarathi Banerjee,

National Institute of Science, Technology &
Development Studies (NISTADS), and Dr. K.S.Krishnan Marg, New Delhi,
India

The Ethics of Innovation in High-Level Radioactive
Waste Management

Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Ph.D. student, University
of Toronto

Morning Session 3

(Parallel)

10:20am

Salle 309 Tabaret

Comment renforcer les moyens d’action des
employés
(en francais):

Innovation et entrepreneurship dans le secteur
public au Canada

Luc Bernier, École nationale d’administration
publique, Montréal, and Taïeb Hafsi , École des Hautes Études
Commerciales, Montréal

Bruno Bonneville, Executive Director, Commission
du droit du Canada

Innovations et fonction publique: des efforts
louables; un arrimage difficile

Denis Harrisson, professeur, Département de
relations industrielles, Université du Québec à Hull

11:50am

Lunch

Afternoon Session 1

12:30 pm

Empowering Clients and Employees:

From cheerleaders to darts players: User
evaluation of caseworkers as performance measurement

Caroline Andrew, Dean of Social Sciences,
University of Ottawa

An Empowering Approach to Measuring Quality in
Social Care Services in England

Monica Dowling, Department of Social and Political
Science,

Royal Holloway, University of London, Surrey,
United Kingdom

You’ve Got to Conform to Create: The
Implications of Corporate Culture on Innovation in the Canadian
Federal Public Service

Donald Hall, The Tweedsmuir Group, Ottawa, Canada

Break

2pm

Short Break

Afternoon

Session 2

2:10 pm

Comparing Approaches:

Ontario Delivers Innovation

Mary Anne Covelli, Director, Ontario Public
Service Restructuring Secretariat, Cabinet Office, Government of
Ontario

Ruth Dantzer, Chair CCMD Round Table on
Innovation, Associate Deputy Minister, Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Classic Theories – Contemporary Applications: a
comparative study of the implementation of innovation in Canadian
and Chinese Public Sector environments

Michael Miles, Faculty Member, and Mr. Arun
Thangaraj, Graduate Student, School of Management, University of
Ottawa

Leadership and Innovation in the Public Sector

Sandford Borins, Chair, Division of Management,
University of Toronto at Scarborough, Toronto, Canada.

Break

3:40pm

Break

Afternoon Session 3

3:50 pm

Wrap-up, Workshop Rapporteur

Discussion of Learning Achieved

Caroline Andrew,
Dean of Social Sciences, University of Ottawa and

Closing

4:35pm

Workshop Closing

Evaluations

Discussion of possibility of future workshop.

Eleanor Glor

5:00pm

Good-byes

Later:

6:00pm

For those who are interested:

Pay-your-own way Supper at D’Arcy McGee’s
Restaurant (an Irish Pub) at 44 Elgin Street

Even

Later

Skating on the Rideau Canal

Rental skates are available on the Canal. Dress
warmly.

Workshop Planning Committee:

  • Siroun Aghajanian, Director, Planning, Strategic
    Initiatives and Financial Information Strategies, Senate of Canada
  • Caroline Andrew, Dean of Social Sciences, University of Ottawa
  • Ron Bell, Psychologist, Royal Ottawa Hospital
  • Raymond Bouchard, Strategic Planning and Futures Consultant
  • Donna Carter, Strategic Initiatives Consultant, City of Ottawa
  • Mohamed Charih, professeur, Ecole nationale d’administration publique
    (Hull)
  • Paul Crookall, Management Consultant
  • Eleanor Glor, Convener, The Innovation Salon/Le Salon de l’innovation,
    and Editor-in-Chief and Publisher, The Innovation Journal/La Revue de l’innovation
  • Leslie A. Pal, Professor and Director, School of Public Policy and
    Administration, Carleton University

To register for the Innovation Workshop: paulcrookall@sympatico.ca
To register for the Innovation Salon: Glor.Eleanor@ic.gc.ca
To register for the Innovation Conference: LilyC@ccmd-ccg.gc.ca

 

Revised February

7 2002

 

7. List of
Accepted Papers
(PDF)

Delivering
Results through Quality: the Ontario Public Service reaps the benefits
of its Quality Service Strategy
by Lois A. Bain, OPS Restructuring
Secretariat, Cabinet Office, Government of Ontario

Incentives
to Innovation in Development Governance: Some Aspects of Information
System Designing
by Parthasarathi
Banerjee, National Institute of Science, Technology & Development
Studies (NISTADS), and Dr. K.S.Krishnan Marg, New Delhi

Innovations
in Workforce Management: the
Electronic Learning Record, Prior Learning Assessment, and Human Capital Accounting
by Dr. Kathryn Barker, President, FuturEd

From
cheerleaders to darts players: User evaluation of caseworkers as
performance measurement
by Steen Bengtsson and Janika Wiene, Social
Research Institute in Copenhagen and Roskilde University.

Innovation
et entrepreneurship dans le secteur public au Canada (en francais)
par
Luc Bernier, École nationale d’administration publique, Montréal et
Taïeb Hafsi, École des Hautes Études Commerciales, Montréal

Leadership
and Innovation in the Public Sector
by Sandford Borins, University
of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Strategic
Innovation in Post-Conflict Situations: Comparative Use of Large-Group Interaction Methods.
Strategic
innovation following complex emergencies requires change processes that
can stimulate society-wide action through invention of new definitions,
creation of new alliances, and the triumph of optimism, by Jeanne-Marie
Col, United Nations.

Ontario
Delivers Innovation
by Mary Anne Covelli, Director, Ontario Public
Service Restructuring Secretariat, Cabinet Office, Government of Ontario

The
New Paradigm: Donor
Ownership of Patent Rights Trough Contract Law
by Lawrence Dick,Candidate
Juris Doctorate, Chicago-Kent College of Law, Chicago,
Illinois U.S.A.

Jurgen
Habermas’ Concept of Universal Pragmatics: A Practical Approach to
Ethics and Innovation
by Howard Doughty, professor, Seneca College
of Arts and Technology.

An Empowering Approach to Measuring Quality in
Social Care Services in England
by Dr. Monica Dowling, Department of
Social and Political Science, Royal Holloway, University of London,
Egham, Surrey, United Kingdom

The
Internet as a Metaphor for the Role of the Modern Government Laboratory
by
Ron
Freedman, The Impact Group, Toronto

Risks
and Challenges in Thinking About Innovation
by Eleanor Glor,
Editor-in-Chief, The Innovation Journal: The Public Sector Innovation
Journal
(http://www.innovation.cc)

You’ve
Got to Conform to Create: The
Implications of Corporate Culture on Innovation in the Canadian Federal
Public Service
by Donald Hall, The Tweedsmuir Group, Ottawa

Innovations
et fonction publique : des
efforts louables; un arrimage difficile
by Denis Harrisson, professeur, Département de relations
industriellesm, Université du Québec à Hull

The
Ethics of Innovation in High-Level Radioactive Waste Management
Genevieve Fuji Johnson, University of Toronto

The Experiences from Transforming the Ministry of Trade
and Industry in Denmark into a Development-Oriented Organization

by Birgit Kjølby, former Head of Division, Ministry of Trade and
Industry, now Ministry of Science, Technology and Development

Developing
First Nations Indicators for Community Health,
byDavid
J Leech, Ph.D. Student, University of Ottawa

Rethinking
E-Government: Dilemmas of
Public Service, Citizenship and Democracy
by Graham
D. Longford, Department of Political Studies, Trent University

The
Context for Public Service Innovation:
The Case of the Italian National Railroad Company
by Alfonso
Marino and Eugenio Corti

Classic
Theories – Contemporary Applications: A Comparative Study of the
Implementation of Innovation in Canadian and Chinese Public Sector
Environments
by Dr.
Michael Miles, Faculty Member, School of Management, University of
Ottawa and Mr. Arun Thangaraj, Graduate Student, MBA Program, University
of Ottawa

Design:
The Somewhat Unknown but Key Ingredient in Innovation
by Glen Milne,
Consultant, Ottawa

Reward
for Employees’ Invention in Japan: Designing Remuneration As Incentive Mechanism

by Ichiro Nakayama, Visiting
Associate Professor, Department of Intellectual Property, Research
Center for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Tokyo, and
Research Fellow, Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry,
Tokyo

Individual and Organizational Creativity by Christina Patterson,
Halifax, Canada

A Topographical Map of the Innovation Landscape by
VE Ross and AW Kleingeld, Centre for Process
Engineering, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa

Ethics
in Innovation: Power (Electricity) Sector Reforms in India with Special
Reference to the Rajasthan State (India)
by Dr.Pradeep K. Saxena,
Assistant Professor of Public Administration, University of Rajasthan,
Jaipur, India

The
Ethics of Innovation
by David Shugarman and Ian Greene, York
University, Toronto

Restructuring
Schools Using Learning Technologies – Four Challenges for the Teaching
Profession
by Ken Stevens & David Dibbon, Centre for TeleLearning and Rural
Education, Faculty of Education, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Federal-Provincial
Business Registry Services: Offering Electronic Inter-jurisdictional
Services Based on Business Needs.
David
Stuewe, CEO and Stuart Maclean, Vice President, Workers’
Compensation Board of Nova Scotia

The Reality of Innovation in Government by Nada
Teofilovic

Can
Parliaments take part in Innovation Process? They Should.
by Paula Tiihonen, Secretary to the Finnish
Parliamentary Committee on the Future, Finland.

Governance,
Coaching and Synergistic Power: Towards
the Democratic Organization
by Aida A. Warah, School of Psychology,
University of Ottawa and Leadership Unit, Treasury Board Secretariat,
Government of Canada.

 

Revised February

02 2002

 

8. Description
of Authors/Speakers
(PDF)

  • Mr. Daryl R. Conner
  • Dr. Everett Rogers, author of “The Diffusion of Innovations
  • Dr. Michael Kirton, developer of the Kirton Adaptation-Innovation theory
  • Mr. Jean David, former VP Marketing of le Cirque du Soleil
  • Mr. William Sturner, author of “Impact: Transforming Your Organization

and a line up of other keynote speakers.

Revised December 3

2002

 

9. Proceedings

See PDF document.

 

Revised

July 05, 2002

 

 

 

Revised

January 03, 2002 new pdf Jan 27 2017