A Civic Technologist's Practice Guide
By Cyd Harrell
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About this ebook
This friendly guide is for technology people who work, or want to work, in the public sector. In it, Cyd Harrell outlines the types of projects, partnerships, and people that civic technologists encounter, and the methods they can use to make lasting change. She focuses on princip
Cyd Harrell
Cyd Harrell is a UX researcher and product manager who got hooked on civic tech at early 2010s hackathons. When Facebook bought her employer in 2012, she chose to invest her career in public service technology work. Cyd has helped US city, county, federal, and state agencies unlock the power of technology to serve constituents. She has worked independently, with the Center for Civic Design, Code for America, and 18F. Over the years, Cyd has been a mentor and leader to many people in the field, and she is proud to have served as the first chief of staff of 18F. She is dedicated to a more inclusive, more capable, and better coordinated civic tech movement. Cyd lives in San Francisco with her husband and daughter. She is easy to find on Twitter and always happy to talk to civic technologists.
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A Civic Technologist's Practice Guide - Cyd Harrell
A Civic Technologist’s Practice Guide
by Cyd Harrell
Copyright
A Civic Technologist’s Practice Guide
by Cyd Harrell
E-Book Edition
Five Seven Five Books
San Francisco, California
a personal imprint
Please report errors at cydharrell.com
Author and Publisher: Cyd Harrell
Editor: Sally Kerrigan
Cover Design: Oxide Design
Copy Editor: Caren Litherland
© 2020 Cyd Harrell
All Rights Reserved
EPUB ISBN: 1-7352865-1-8
EPUB ISBN 13: 978-1-7352865-1-8
LCCN: 2020914826
for everyone doing the work
Introduction
Welcome to A Civic Technologist’s Practice Guide . Whether you’ve been at this for fifteen years or are just now contemplating a career shift, I want to thank you for thinking about how (and if) technology can make civic life better.
How technologists think about and go about their practice is an important factor in whether tech is a force for good, a force for ill, or completely irrelevant. As the field matures, our responsibilities grow; what began as a volunteer-run civic hacking
weekend event might now be someone’s full-time charge in a Digital Innovation office. The opportunities are enormous, and we need many more civic technologists—especially Black and brown techies and others from currently underrepresented backgrounds—to bring these opportunities to fruition.
I entered civic tech as a full-time career in 2012, after a couple years of experimenting with volunteer efforts and trying to find my role. I’m a UX researcher, and when I started going to hackathons, I wasn’t sure if there was room for people from the design world at all. There certainly weren’t many recognizable design roles in government. But I badly wanted to contribute my skills to the public good, so I started showing up at weekend events and offering to help. The projects were fascinating and, somewhat to my surprise, nobody ever sent me home because I couldn’t code.
When Code for America (CfA) was founded, its office happened to be just two blocks from mine in San Francisco, so I reached out to Jennifer Pahlka and asked if I could mentor their fellows in research. I had never experienced such rewarding work, and when the little research company I worked for was sold to Facebook in 2012, I knew it was time for a career shift. It took me six months to convince CfA to hire me, and in the interim I got to help Dana Chisnell research one of the Field Guides to Ensuring Voter Intent . [1] More than anyone else in the field, I’ve been influenced by Dana’s practice, especially the time and care she and her colleagues put into building relationships with election officials.
Over the past eight years, I’ve seen success, failure, and a lot of ambiguity. I’ve become well-known in the field, but I share my meandering path for anyone who isn’t sure there’s a place for them in civic tech. I’ll say it loud: if you have any technology skill that is strong enough to teach someone else, then there’s good work you can do and we’d love to have you.
I talk every week with people who hope to use their hard-earned technology skills to make the world a better place, many of them disillusioned about the potential of private-sector tech to do so. I also talk with colleagues who are deep into their civic tech careers—elated by a success, exhausted by a failure, facing a new dilemma. Disillusionment and overwhelm are natural in jobs like ours, given that our project in US civic tech aims to change foundational institutions that have existed for hundreds of years. Institutional change is political by definition; we’re trying to shift the relationships of major, society-sustaining entities to their constituents.
Is technology the way to solve these problems? It’s an urgent question for the 2020s and beyond. I believe that technology can make civic life better, but that it often fails to do so—sometimes catastrophically and with real harm.
Because we are so new on the scene, and the institutions we seek to change are so large and impact so many lives, each of us needs to be conscious of our values and assumptions. We need to be able to explain ourselves to partners and stakeholders, and to be able to regularly check whether we are truly doing good. In my own approach to civic tech (and in this book), I assume several foundational elements are important:
collaborative workstyles
iterative, evidence-based practice, whether in development, design, or policy
user-centered design
secure and sustainable technology
public transparency and accountability
full participation in civic life and civic tech by people from underrepresented groups
This book, written as civic tech enters its teenage years, aims to gather together some of the most useful principles and practices for institutional work that have emerged so far.
Because the field is new, and operating at the intersection of very different working cultures, you will be comparatively alone and in charge of organizing your own work on most civic tech projects, no matter your professional level. Even if you join an established team, each new engagement will bring questions of how best to partner, and how to shape a project for the biggest impact at each stage. Many chapters in this book are intended to help think through these questions.
I assume you already have improvements you want to make or specific people you want to serve; choosing one of those is a personal question that goes beyond the scope of this book. To achieve your goals in civic tech, you’ll need to figure out:
which part of the ecosystem you need to work in to affect it (Chapter 1)
which style of partnership suits your situation best (Chapter 3)
which kind of project will have the biggest impact (Chapter 4)
how to apply your specific skill set and what additional skills you may need (Chapter 7)
how to ensure your efforts last (Chapter 10)
And there’s much more to working in the civic space successfully and sustainably. How we work affects how much good we do and how long we’re able to keep it up. So other chapters cover:
taking account of our privilege both as technologists and, for many of us, as people benefiting from racial or other privileges (Chapter 2)
wrestling with the idea of innovation and what it means to the field (Chapter 5)
learning what to expect when working in spaces with major constraints (Chapter 6)
considering team structures and methods for public-sector work (Chapter 8)
discovering what civic technologists need to know about public policy (Chapter 9)
learning how to bridge tech and government working cultures (Chapter 11)
identifying allies at all levels and building partnerships with them (Chapter 12)
taking care of ourselves along the way (Chapter 13)
Because its goal is change, civic tech embodies an interesting split between demonstrating and operationalizing the potential of modern tech. I like to call these two branches showing what’s possible and doing what’s necessary . Many projects are a mix of the two, but they require different mindsets. Showing what’s possible
is about speed, prototyping, design, public feedback, and data. These are often web projects because web tools are great for those purposes. Doing what’s necessary,
on the other hand, is about shifting the underlying practices and systems: back-end systems, security, and procurement; hiring and team composition; even shifting budget priorities.
In this book, I’ve intentionally focused more on principles, categories, and sets of questions than on explicit methodology. I don’t think it matters much whether you decide to use Scrum on your project, but I do think that the principles of iterative development are essential and you should consider the most suitable way to make them part of your and your partners’ shared practice. I don’t know which strategic framework will work best for your situation, but I do know that if you don’t form strong partnerships with career staff and stakeholders, your efforts will fail.
The private-sector tech industry focuses on scale a great deal, but public institutions represent a different kind of scale. They affect people’s lives not just at enormous breadth, but over long stretches of time. Most of them operate in full awareness of this, seeing their role as one of stewardship of public goods (and public funds) rather than rapid innovation.
With this different perspective on scale and time, we technologists have to earn our way to working on deeper layers of digital public infrastructure through steady and trustworthy partnership on surface-level projects. Whether we’re developers, designers, data people, or product managers, we often do our most effective work by focusing on small changes at deeper infrastructural layers of whatever stack
we work on. My goal with this book is to set you up for success and get you to that level of practice.
Across the thousands of entities and cultures that make up the American civic sphere, there’s no one place to look for answers to the questions each of us faces about where and how to do this work—and so I hope that this book will serve as an anchor for a conversation that, as we are about to enter our teenage years as a field, is coming due.
Chapter 1: What Is Civic Tech?
I subscribe to the definition that government is what we do together . Working in civic technology means partnering with any of thousands of entities in the wide universe of civic institutions, all with the common goal of improving public life. Between the federal government, the fifty state governments, the approximately three thousand county-level governments, and the municipal governments of over twenty thousand cities and towns, there are close to twenty-five thousand entities in the United States’ civic sphere—and that doesn’t even count tribal governments and regional districts that don’t map to city or county boundaries. Add on community organizations that also serve the public, and we’re looking at tens of thousands of possible partners.
Civic tech is a loosely integrated movement that brings the strengths of the private-sector tech world (its people, methods, or actual technology) to public entities with the aim of making government more responsive, efficient, modern, and more just. It also seeks to use digital tech to reimagine interactions among fellow citizens [2] working together, and between those citizens and their governments.
Simply put, those of us who work in civic tech want public digital goods to be as good as the ones made by commercial entities like Apple or Google—and we want public digital infrastructure [3] to be as good, too. We want to access services, exercise rights, and build communities with the ease and respect that the best digital technology can afford.
Tall order.
And because it is such a tall order, I like to think of civic tech as a fifty-year project, with the start of the timeline around 2008. That summer, the city of Washington, DC, hosted an Apps for Democracy hackathon that kick-started the city-focused and largely volunteer-driven open data movement. By the time the Code for America Brigade launched in 2012, the movement was active in over twenty cities, and lower-profile initiatives had begun percolating throughout the federal government as well.
These early initiatives introduced an optimistic view of what government could be, an eagerness to act rather than just publish, and an ability to attract people who might not have considered working in the public sector before. It’s worth noting that all of these early organizations were founded and led by people with a lot of power in our existing system. None of these initiatives was truly diverse in the beginning, and the problems stemming from this persist in the field to this day.
Civic tech, in its fifty-year timeline, is now in its adolescence—which means it’s the right time to reckon with the way power is distributed within the movement. While many individuals and institutions have contributed to the development of civic tech, most of its culture comes from a few early centers that were operating in the early 2010s, [4] before the US national teams came into being. The field is still shaped by a large number of alumni from these groups, with strong perspectives.
Civic tech in 2020 is a complicated, imperfect field that comprises multiple national, state, and city teams, a vast network of volunteer networks, an infrastructure of major non-profit funders, and a growing ecosystem of companies large and small—to say nothing of tens of thousands of individuals. I urge you to approach it with both an open mind and a skeptical attitude, and to see yourself as a part of it from your very first steps, with the power to change it for the better.
Government in the United States: It’s Complicated
As a civic technologist, a basic understanding of the American government will help you figure out how to work effectively within and across various branches and entities that have complex relationships with one another. Residents of the United States need to interact with all of the four major levels of government: federal, state, county, and municipal. Each level replicates, more or less, the three-branch structure of executive, legislative, and judiciary: you’ll find elected legislatures, executive branches headed by elected leaders and administered by permanent staff, and court systems run by appointed or elected judges.
There are some exceptions to the rule. Not all states have municipal-level courts, and not every town has one even where they do; quite a few large cities have