SemanticGov
SemanticGov [1] was a European Union-funded research and development project that lasted from 2006 to 2009, aimed at building the infrastructure (software, models, services, etc.) necessary for enabling the offering of Semantic Web Services by public administration (PA). SemanticGov aimed to address longstanding challenges faced by public administrations such as achieving interoperability amongst PA agencies both within a country as well as amongst countries, easing the discovery of PA services by its customers, facilitating the execution of complex services often involving multiple PA agencies in interworkflows.
The SemanticGov project aimed at capitalizing on the Service Oriented Architectures paradigm, implemented through state-of-the-art Semantic Web Services [2] technology and supported by rigorous and reusable public administration domain analysis and modelling, while being in line with all major European programmes and initiatives in the field e.g. the European Interoperability Framework and the previous work conducted by the EU IDABC Programme, the i2010 group of Member States representatives and the Competitiveness & Innovation (CIP) Programme.
Objectives
The SemanticGov project objectives were:
I. To support the PA client to:
a. Identify the needed services by providing an infrastructure for mapping client needs to PA services;
b. Discover the service of interest through a Federal/National PA Service Directory;
c. Execute and monitor the service workflow by providing an infrastructure for on-the-fly, semi-automated composition, execution and monitoring of complex PA Services.
II. To support European citizens and businesses to access pan-European eGovernment services (PEGS) by providing a Communal Semantic Gateway to resolve semantic incompatibilities amongst different administration systems.
The SemanticGov project was meant not simply provide new electronic government solutions, but to:
a. enhance the administrative capacity of national public administration systems by providing a new paradigm for service provision, and
b. pave the way to the administrative dimension of the European unification (aka “Common European Administrative Space”) by facilitating the communication amongst EU national administrative systems.
Consortium partners
A list of consortium partners follows:
- Centre of Research and Technology Hellas
- National University of Ireland, Galway
- Leopold-Franzens University, Innsbruck
- Ontotext Lab, Sirma Group Corp.
- CAPGEMINI
- SOFTWARE AG
- University of Rome "La Sapienza"
- ALTEC S.A
- Region of Central Macedonia
- City of Torino
- Ministry of Interior, Public Administration and Decentralization
References
- "SemanticGov". Retrieved 2007-10-18.
- Cabral, L.; et al. (2004). "Approaches to Semantic Web Services: an Overview and Comparisons". Springer Berlin / Heidelberg. pp. 225–239.
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