Recoding America: Why Government Is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better by Pahlka, Jennifer
Jennifer Pahlka
Books

Recoding America: Why Government Is Failing in the Digital Age and How We Can Do Better -- Jennifer Pahlka - Hardcover


A bold call to reexamine how our government operates--and sometimes fails to--from President Obama's former deputy chief technology officer and the founder of Code for America

Just when we most need our government to work--to decarbonize our infrastructure and economy, to help the vulnerable through a pandemic, to defend ourselves against global threats--it is faltering. Government at all levels has limped into the digital age, offering online services that can feel even more cumbersome than the paperwork that preceded them and widening the gap between the policy outcomes we intend and what we get.

But it's not more money or more tech we need. Government is hamstrung by a rigid, industrial-era culture, in which elites dictate policy from on high, disconnected from and too often disdainful of the details of implementation. Lofty goals morph unrecognizably as they cascade through a complex hierarchy. But there is an approach taking hold that keeps pace with today's world and reclaims government for the people it is supposed to serve. Jennifer Pahlka shows why we must stop trying to move the government we have today onto new technology and instead consider what it would mean to truly recode American government.

Author: Jennifer Pahlka
Publisher: Metropolitan Books
Published: 06/13/2023
Pages: 336
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.15lbs
Size: 9.10h x 6.40w x 1.30d
ISBN: 9781250266774

Review Citation(s):
Library Journal Prepub Alert 12/01/2022 pg. 16
Publishers Weekly 03/27/2023
Kirkus Reviews 04/15/2023
Booklist 04/14/2023

About the Author
Jennifer Pahlka is the former deputy chief technology officer of the United States and the founder of Code for America, a nonprofit that believes government can work for people in the digital age. Pahlka is the winner of a Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, among others, and has been selected by Wired magazine as one of the people who have most shaped technology and society in the past twenty-five years.