When conducting a survey on the use of technology in the
legislative process, one of the questions I asked was “Has the
legislature, as an institution or in part, resisted technology based
changes?” I asked this question based on my own experience
with the Massachusetts Legislature. I spent 9 years working with
legislators and senior staff, and the way they sometimes
approached technology was at times comical―at times
frightening. My friends and I watched on―and laughed―the
first time a laptop computer or an iPhone made its way onto the
floor of the Massachusetts House or Senate and the members
gathered around it, acting as though they were looking at an
artifact that had been dropped from Mars. I also saw an older
legislative drafter become befuddled and angry when he was
forced to start using the “track changes” and “comment”
functions on Microsoft Word rather than marking up a bill with
his beloved red pencil.
Sean J. Kealy. Technology & Legislative Drafting In The United States.
Internet:<sites.bu.edu> (adapted).
Judge the following item concerning the previous text.
In his text, the author shows his skepticism about the use of technology in the legislative process.
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Analista Legislativo - Processo Legislativo e Gestão
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