The Digital Nations or DN (previously the Digital 5, Digital 7 and Digital 9) is a collaborative network of the world's leading
digital governments with a common goal of harnessing digital technology to improve citizens' lives. Members share world-class digital practices, collaborate to solve common problems, identify improvements to digital services, and support and champion the group's growing digital economies. Through international cooperation, the Digital Nations aims to identify how digital government can provide the most benefit to citizens. The group embodies
minilateral engagement, where small groups of states cooperate on specific topics with a global impact.
Members
Estonia,
Israel,
New Zealand, the
Republic of Korea, and the
United Kingdom are the founding members of the D5. In February 2018,
Canada and
Uruguay joined the group to form the D7. In November 2018,
Mexico and
Portugal joined to form the D9.
Denmark joined as the tenth member of Digital Nations in November 2019.
The following government departments lead their country's engagement with the DN:
*
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS; french: Secrétariat du Conseil du Trésor du Canada, SCT) is the administrative branch of the Treasury Board of Canada (the committee of ministers responsible for the financial management of the fe ...
*Agency for Digitisation,
Danish Ministry of Finance
*
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communications of the Republic of Estonia
* National Digital Affairs Directorate of the Government of Israel
* National Digital Strategy Coordination, President's Office of the Government of Mexico
*
Department of Internal Affairs of the Government of New Zealand
* Ministry for Modernisation of the State and Public Administration of the Government of Portugal
*
Ministry of the Interior and Safety of the Government of the Republic of Korea
*
Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport of the Government of the United Kingdom
*
Agency for e-Government and Information Society at the President's Office of the Government of Uruguay
Charter

In 2014, the founding members signed a charter committing to share and improve upon the participant nations' practices in digital services and digital economies. Updated to reflect a growing membership, the DN Charter outlines a mutual commitment to digital development and leadership through nine core principles:
# User needs – the design of public services for the citizen
#
Open standards – a commitment to credible royalty-free open standards to promote interoperability
#
Open source
Open source is source code that is made freely available for possible modification and redistribution. Products include permission to use the source code, design documents, or content of the product. The open-source model is a decentralized sof ...
– future government systems, tradecraft, standards and manuals are created as open source and are shareable between members
# Open markets – in government procurement, create true competition for companies regardless of size. Encourage and support a start-up culture and promote growth through open markets
#
Open government (transparency) – be a member of the Open Government Partnership and use open licenses to produce and consume open data
# Connectivity – enable an online population through comprehensive and high-quality digital infrastructure
# Digital skills and confidence – support children, young people and adults in developing digital competencies and skills
# Assisted digital – a commitment to support all its citizens to access digital services
# Commitment to share and learn – all members commit to work together to help solve each other's issues wherever they can
The updated Charter was signed on 6 November 2019 in Montevideo, Uruguay.
Meetings
The Digital Nations meets twice per year to showcase accomplishments in countries’ digital landscapes and co-create the next best practices. Members participate in political-level Ministerial Summits, hosted by the rotating Chair nation, and working-level Officials Meetings.
D5 London 2014
The first event of the D5 was held in London on 9 and 10 December 2014 with delegates from the five founding nations attending, as well as the United States, who were there as observers; the event was hosted by the UK's Cabinet Office minister
Francis Maude. The UK's
Culture, Communications and Creative Industries Minister Ed Vaizey and their
chief technology officer Liam Maxwell
Liam Maxwell (born June 1968) is a British technology executive and public servant. From April 2016 to August 2018 he was the UK's first National Technology Adviser, having been the UK's first Chief Technology Officer (CTO), as part of the Gover ...
were also present.
Themes
The 2014 summit had three themes: Teaching children to code, open markets, and connectivity.
= Teaching children to code
=
By teaching children to code, the D5 intends to train the newest generation of kids – the "technology generation" – to take an active role in creating IT, rather than simply consuming it. Discussion points involving this theme included looking at whether simply changing the curriculum is enough to achieve this goal, methods that may be used to give teachers the skills to teach and inspire children to code, connecting the fields of industry and education so that such a change can be achieved, and ensuring
gender balance
The sex ratio (or gender ratio) is usually defined as the ratio of males to females in a population. As explained by Fisher's principle, for evolutionary reasons this is typically about 1:1 in species which reproduce sexually. Many species devia ...
and encouraging
girls to take on tech roles.
Advances made by the D5's participating countries have already been made to achieve this goal. In the UK, England became the first country in the world to mandate that coding be taught to all pupils aged 5 to 16; In Estonia, primary schools have been teaching students to code since the 1990s; In New Zealand, they have introduced a set of Digital Technology Guidelines that will allow secondary schools to teach the subject coherently – they have also invested in new graduate
ICT
ICT may refer to:
Sciences and technology
* Information and communications technology
* Image Constraint Token, in video processing
* Immunochromatographic test, a rapid immunoassay used to detect diseases such as anthrax
* In-circuit test, in ...
training schools to transition
tertiary students into the workforce; in Israel they have "the most rigorous computer science high school programme in the world" due to a major review of computing at school that took place in the 1990s; South Korea teaches some computer science in school and also offers an optional online course for those who are interested.
= Open markets
=
The focus of open markets is to open bidding on government IT contracts to
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) through the use of digital marketplaces such as the
UK Government's G-cloud. The benefit of this to the government is to reduce costs by contracting out to the company that can provide the best value for money spent. The reduced barriers provided by an open market give SMEs who may not have been previously considered for a government contract, or who have never bid on one before, a fairer and more seamless opportunity to do so. Moving away from large outsourcers requires
right sizing
Rights are legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement; that is, rights are the fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention, or ethical theory ...
, which in this case can be achieved by buying parts of contracts from several smaller suppliers rather than buying one large contract from a single supplier, using
agile delivery, buying
cloud services, and building
in-house engineering and
operations capability.
Like the UK's G-cloud, New Zealand is also building a government cloud programme to ease the process of government buying from SMEs. They are committed to using '
as a service' products to open up the market. South Korea too has already built an
e-procurement
E-procurement (electronic procurement, sometimes also known as supplier exchange) is the business-to-business or business-to-consumer or business-to-government purchase and sale of supplies, work, and services through the Internet as well as oth ...
system that allows SMEs the opportunity to win government contracts. Since its inception, it has saved $8billion annually and made a reduction of 7.8million pages of paper documents per year. Bidding time has been reduced from thirty hours to two.
= Connectivity
=
With an increasing number of internet connected devices in each household, the D5 intends to look at what type of infrastructure is needed to maintain and expand connectivity, as well as how they can work together to share each other's experiences and to develop standards together. Citing a
Cisco figure, the D5 expects over 50billion internet connected devices to be in use around the world by 2020, with as many as dozens of each device in every household.
To meet these needs, the UK government's focus will be on
Machine to Machine technology, the
Internet of Things
The Internet of things (IoT) describes physical objects (or groups of such objects) with sensors, processing ability, software and other technologies that connect and exchange data with other devices and systems over the Internet or other comm ...
and
5G mobile networks. In March 2014, they announced they will be investing £45million in the Internet of Things. They have set up
smart cities demonstrators in
Glasgow,
London,
Bristol and
Peterborough, and their 5G Innovation Centre is the world's first dedicated 5G testbed centre.
In a speech during the summit, Cabinet Minister Francis Maude announced that the UK intends to have 97% of all citizen interactions with the state online by the end of the next parliament. In Estonia they have
X-Road, a secure
platform-independent Internet-based data exchange layer that provides transparent digital services with minimum costs. Through a
public-private partnership, New Zealand is in the process of upgrading internet infrastructure to
fibre optic cables. Korea too has made a significant investment into The Internet of Things.
Events
There were a number of events and presentations held throughout the city. The
Duke of York
Duke of York is a title of nobility in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. Since the 15th century, it has, when granted, usually been given to the second son of English (later British) monarchs. The equivalent title in the Scottish peerage was Du ...
hosted an event for the delegates at
Buckingham Palace
Buckingham Palace () is a London royal residence and the administrative headquarters of the monarch of the United Kingdom. Located in the City of Westminster, the palace is often at the centre of state occasions and royal hospitality. It ...
, where 100 UK digital startups showcased their products to attendees.
Presenters included Crowd Emotion, Code Kingdoms, Therapy Box, Yoyo, Skyscape, Kano, and
Relative Insight
Relative Insight is a technology and analytics firm founded in 2012 with offices in London and Lancaster. The firm uses technology originally created for crime detection to help brands interact with their audiences. Using comparative language alg ...
.
Another event highlighted the D5's intention of teaching programming to children of young ages by having the
BBC lead a group of 11-year-olds through a coding session in which they utilised a
Doctor Who
''Doctor Who'' is a British science fiction television series broadcast by the BBC since 1963. The series depicts the adventures of a Time Lord called the Doctor, an extraterrestrial being who appears to be human. The Doctor explores the u ...
themed game to gain a basic understanding of the practice of computer programming.
Future
The group expanded rapidly from five to ten members, with other countries signalling their interest in joining the Digital Nations. In the interest of strengthening capacity of the DN network, the Steering Committee agreed to establish a Secretariat to work on behalf of all DN countries in support of the group's key priorities. The DN Secretariat was introduced at the 5th Ministerial Summit in Israel in November 2018.
See also
*
E-democracy
E-democracy (a combination of the words electronic and democracy), also known as digital democracy or Internet democracy, is the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in political and governance processes. The term is be ...
*
e-Estonia
*
E-governance
Electronic governance or e-governance is the application of information technology for delivering government services, exchange of information, communication transactions, integration of various stand-alone systems between government to citiz ...
*
Government by algorithm
*
Open data
*
Open data in the United Kingdom
*
Open-source governance
Open-source governance (also known as open governance and open politics) is a political philosophy which advocates the application of the philosophies of the open-source and open-content movements to democratic principles to enable any interes ...
*
Transformational government
References
{{reflist
Intergovernmental organizations
Open government
E-government
IT infrastructure