SG50+ Conference – Session 4: Governance

Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), Singapore July 15, 2015
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Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), Singapore

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About

The Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) was established in 1988 as an independent think-tank to study and generate public policy ideas in Singapore. IPS became an autonomous research centre of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore in 2008. Today, IPS continues to analyse public policy, build bridges between thought leaders, and communicate its findings to a wide audience. The Institute examines issues of critical national interest across a variety of fields, and studies the attitudes and aspirations of Singaporeans through surveys of public perception. It adopts a multi-disciplinary approach in its analyses and takes the long-term view in its strategic deliberation and research. In 2013, the Institute set up the IPS Social Lab – a dedicated data collection unit to track evolving social perceptions, attitudes and behaviours in Singapore over the long term.

Video Description

Session 4 of the SG50+ conference on 3 July saw The Rt Hon Sir John Major KG CH, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and Mr Goh Chok Tong, Emeritus Senior Minister and Patron at the Institute of Policy Studies discuss new challenges in governance. The session was chaired by Dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Kishore Mahbubani. Summary: In the diverse polities that are emerging in societies like Singapore, traditional notions of authority and hierarchy are changing. The ability of those in positions of authority to set the agenda and the terms of the debate is diminishing. Developments in communications technology are enabling citizens to put their governments under greater scrutiny. But the same technologies also offer citizens opportunities to collaborate and find collective solutions to public problems. Even as governments find themselves under greater pressures to account to their citizens, their ability to harness the intelligence of their citizens has never been greater. This session examines the potentially disruptive forces in democratic governance that are emerging today, especially as a result of advances in communications technology and the growth of social media. It will explore whether the diminution of state-centred authority reduces the quality of governance and of public goods, or if this might be offset by new forms of governance such as citizen co-creation and co-production. The session also looks at how Singapore’s system of governance and its state-society relations would have to evolve such that citizens’ expectations of good government are met alongside rising demands for representation, accountability and transparency.

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