WRITTEN ON July 8th, 2008 BY William Heath AND STORED IN Political engagement, Transformational Government

In all the excitement I forgot to note the publication in June of the civil service blogging code. Of course Jeremy picked up on this weeks ago. I cant really imagine guidelines under which Civil Serf would reanimate, but I wonder if this would bring back Owen Barder? It strikes me as concise and pretty sensible. Good job!

I am a civil servant – Principles for participation online

1. Be credible
* Be accurate, fair, thorough and transparent.
2. Be consistent
* Encourage constructive criticism and deliberation. Be cordial, honest and professional at all times.
3. Be responsive
* When you gain insight, share it where appropriate.
4. Be integrated
* Wherever possible, align online participation with other offline communications.
5. Be a civil servant
* Remember that you are an ambassador for your organisation. Wherever possible, disclose your position as a representative of your department or agency.

How the Civil Service Code applies to online participation

The Civil Service Code applies to your participation online as a civil servant or when discussing government business. You should participate in the same way as you would with other media or public forums such as speaking at conferences.

Disclose your position as a representative of your department or agency unless there are exceptional circumstances, such as a potential threat to personal security. Never give out personal details like home address and phone numbers.

Always remember that participation online results in your comments being permanently available and open to being republished in other media. Stay within the legal framework and be aware that libel, defamation, copyright and data protection laws apply. This means that you should not disclose information, make commitments or engage in activities on behalf of Government unless you are authorised to do so. This authority may already be delegated or may be explicitly granted depending on your organisation.

Also be aware that this may attract media interest in you as an individual, so proceed with care whether you are participating in an official or a personal capacity. If you have any doubts, take advice from your line manager

The Civil Service Code can be viewed at http://www.civilservice.gov.uk/iam/codes/cscode/index.asp

There could be something specific to encourage public servants to correct factual inaccuracies in online fora. But this is pretty much all one could ask for.

3 Responses to “Belated acknowledgement of long-overdue civil service social media participation guidelines”

 
Jeremy Gould wrote on July 8th, 2008 2:26 pm :

They’er certainly a good start.

Owen Barder wrote on July 9th, 2008 10:49 am :

It has brought me back! See http://www.owen.org/blog

Jeremy Gould wrote on July 9th, 2008 5:59 pm :

That’s fantastic news – sock it to ’em Owen.