Connected Government Framework: An Infrastructure for the Delivery of Seamless Government Services

Published: January 30, 2006

*Interoperability is literally the hinge on a door that opens a completely new era of interaction between government agencies and the citizens they serve. Through our [Microsoft and HP] partnership, agencies can provide citizens with an integrated, single point of access for government services while at the same time obtain an integrated view of the data they need to deliver those services more efficiently and cost-effectively.*
Enrique Barkey
Worldwide Director of Civilian Agency Solutions
HP

Overview

The Microsoft Connected Government Framework (CGF) illustrates the value of interoperability in the delivery of Government e-services: Government-to-Government, business-to-Government and citizen-to-Government. It describes the many issues involved in achieving successful interoperability programs – together with the tools, technologies and standards that help make this possible. It also provides a core model for interoperability, expressed across six distinct levels:

Infrastructure and Networking

Data Access

Service and Component

Service and Process Integration

Security and Identity

Management

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Benefits of CGF

Providing a common infrastructure shared by multiple e-Government services can produce benefits in several categories:

Government

For governments, the common e-Government infrastructure:

Provides a common user identity management model for all Government services

Shares common costs across Government rather then repeating expenditure multiple times by duplication of identical pieces of core infrastructure for each online service

Enables innovative, joined-up services

Provides a single, consistent access path for Government services

Accelerates the delivery of e-Government services by providing reusable common components needed for online service delivery

Scales to meet the growing demand

Drives the take-up of e-Government services

Constituency (Citizen, Organization, Intermediary)

The benefits for the "clients" of e-Government services include:

Single online identity to access multiple government services

Reductions in cost and time to enable online transactions in a consistent, reliable fashion

Hidden complexity and multiplicity of back-end systems interactions at the point of delivery, presented as a single online interaction

Simplified processes for interacting with government across silos, including the potential for “joined-up” services

Faster access to services

Secure two-way communication between clients and Government services

An always-available 24x7 service presented to customers

Application Developers

For application developers building e-Government solutions, the common infrastructure:

Provides a single, consistent authentication and authorization model

Is platform and technology independent

Complies with open standards

Provides consistent interoperability – consistent standard interfaces expose the functionality, regardless of the services and departments concerned so applications can submit all transactions through a single delivery point

Overall Benefits

The overall benefits from the common e-Government infrastructure include:

Accelerated time-to-market for new services

Common, consistent building blocks such as user ID management, authentication, and authorization across all Government services

Improved user experience – one sign-on for all Government services regardless of who provides them, and interaction across the whole of Government rather than separately with each of its silos

Improved developer experience – provides a consistent set of interfaces and specifications to adhere to, regardless of which departments’ services their application interacts with

Limited resource requirement, rather than duplication of common components and infrastructure

A standards-based, interoperable solution – which can integrate easily with systems running on a wide variety of platforms

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The CGF Blueprint

The Microsoft Connected Government Framework Blueprint includes coverage in the following areas:

Connected Government Framework

Architecture and Design Blueprint

Introduction and Overview

About the Microsoft Connected Government Framework

Authors and Contributors

A Roadmap to this Guide

E-Government Scope and Types of Solutions

What is e-Government?

Types of e-Government Solutions

Drivers for Implementing e-Government Solutions

Phases and Levels of Maturity of e-Government

Interaction

Transaction

Transformation

The Trigger Point

The Six Core Levels for Interoperability Solutions

Enabling e-Government Services

The Value of a Common Infrastructure

Addressing Common Architectural Challenges

Multiplicity

Identity Management

Integration Challenges

Flexibility and Agility

Securing the Solution

Scalability, Performance and Availability

The Need for an Owner and Sponsor

Reference Architecture of a Generic e-Government Integration Solution

Principles Guiding the Architecture

An e-Government

Identity Management

Authentication and Authorization

The Service Directory

Document Submission

Orchestrating Business Processes

Integration with Back-End Services

Security

Performance and Scalability

Management and Operations

References, Checklists and Further Information

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Additional Information

For additional information on The Microsoft Connected Government Framework, or to find your local representative, please e-mail: CGF@microsoft.com.


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