• Guidelines for Secure Use of Social Media by Federal Departments and Agencies, v1.0, Federal Chief Information Officers Council [Sept. 17, 2009].
• Comparing Technology Innovation in the Private and Public Sectors, Brookings Institution. [June 2009 PDF].
• Web 2.0 and the Next Generation of Public Service, Accenture. [2009 PDF.] "At its core, Web 2.0 is about empowering a greater number of people to move from 'consumers' to 'producers' — from passive online spectators to active contributors and co-producers of value. Those contributors may be internal to an organization, using collaborative technologies to improve the value they deliver, or they may be citizens themselves. Either way, by tapping into previously underutilized productive capacity, Web 2.0 technologies increasingly allow people to get what they need from each other. This is a game-changing concept for governments."
• Social Software and National Security: An Initial Net Assessment. Center for Technology and National Security Policy at National Defense University, by Mark Drapeau and Linton Wells II. [April 2009 PDF.]
• Realizing the Potential of the Connected Republic: Web 2.0 Opportunities in the Public Sector. CISCO Internet Solutions Group. [March 2009 PDF.]
• Letter from law firm of Howell, Michigan affiliate of Michigan Education Association to Howell school board attorneys objecting to blog published by school board member Wendy Day. [Nov. 12, 2008 PDF.] [Municipalist Q & A with Wendy Day, Jan. 5, 2009]
• Federal Web Managers Council -- Documents and Work Plans.
• Leveraging Web 2.0 in Government -- IBM Center for the Business of Government. [2008 PDF.]
• The Blogging Revolution: Government in the Age of Web 2.0 -- IBM Center for the Business of Government. This link is to the Center site that includes a link to a PowerPoint briefing on the report. And here is video of a presentation author David Wyld did on the report. [2007.] [Municipalist Q & A with Wyld, Nov. 5, 2007.]