Jaipur hosts 29th National e-Governance Conference; AI and citizen-centric services take centre stage
Jaipur, July 1
The 29th National e-Governance Conference commenced in Jaipur on Wednesday, bringing together over 2,700 delegates to discuss the future of digital governance and the integration of Artificial Intelligence in public services.
Speaking to ANI on the scale of the event, Rajasthan Chief Secretary V Srinivas stated that the conference has seen participation from across the country, including officials from 28 states and nine Union Territories.
"The 29th National e-Governance Conference is being held in Jaipur. 2,700 delegates are participating in it. Officials from 28 states, 9 union territories, and various central ministries arrived for this event. Many secretaries from the central government are present," Srinivas said.
The Chief Secretary highlighted that a key focus of the conference is the practical application of emerging technologies to improve citizen-centric services.
"42 exhibition stalls have been set up, showcasing award-winning initiatives and themes. Themes include Artificial Intelligence in governance and citizen-centric governance. Many successful experiments demonstrating how AI can be utilised for citizen-centric governance are being displayed here," he added.
Srinivas expressed optimism that the knowledge shared during the event would have a widespread impact on administrative reforms across India.
"This is expected to have a significant spillover effect across the states... Over the next 2 days, I anticipate that around 200 distinguished speakers will participate in 6 plenary sessions and 6 breakout sessions. There will be excellent discussions," the Chief Secretary noted.
Earlier, inaugurating the two-day conference at the Rajasthan International Centre (RIC), Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma asserted that technology must transcend being a mere tool of convenience to become a prime driver for social inclusion and public welfare.
CM Sharma highlighted how Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "JAM Trinity" (Jan Dhan, Aadhaar, and Mobile) has effectively eliminated middlemen and turned Digital India into a cornerstone of economic development.
"Digital governance must reach the last person in society so that no citizen is left behind from the mainstream of development," the Chief Minister stated in a press release, adding that Artificial Intelligence (AI), data analytics, and robust cyber security are now playing a pivotal role in making governance transparent and citizen-centric.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Good initiative but let's be honest - e-governance has been a mixed bag in India. While Aadhaar helped streamline subsidies, the DigiLocker and UMANG apps still have glitches. AI is great but we need basic internet connectivity in rural areas first. CM Sharma's "last person" vision is noble, but talk is cheap without proper last-mile infrastructure. 🤔
Amazing to see Rajasthan hosting this! I work in tech and the potential for AI in governance is massive - from automating grievance redressal to predictive analytics for crop insurance. But we need to address privacy concerns first. The "JAM Trinity" worked because it was simple; don't make e-governance overly complex for the aam aadmi.
I moved to Jaipur from the UK last year and I must say, India's digital transformation is impressive. The scale of this conference with 2,700 delegates shows real commitment. In the UK, we've had issues with govtech adoption, but India seems to be leapfrogging with AI. Just hope cybersecurity keeps pace - data breaches here could affect crores of citizens.
Another conference, another photo op. I've seen these events before - lots of speeches, fancy stalls, but ground reality is different. I still had to bribe a clerk for my caste certificate last month. AI won't fix corruption unless there's political will to enforce transparency. Still, I hope this time it's different. Let's judge by outcomes, not promises. 😐
Excellent initiative! As someone who works in rural development
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