This page provides support to Wikipedia editors who want to develop articles related to legislation in the United States Congress as it makes laws within the Federal Government of the United States. This project is an outgrowth of a conference in March 2013 in Washington DC: Wikipedia:Meetup/DC/Legislative Data Workshop. Wikipedia is the sixth most popular website [1] and constitutes the Internet's largest and most popular general reference work. [2] [3] [4] As of 2014, it has 18 billion page views and nearly 500 million unique visitors each month. [5] Americans already use it daily to find out information about current proposed legislation and existing public laws. This project is devoted to increasing and improving Wikipedia's coverage of those laws.
Wikipedia is an excellent place to host information about legislation. Wikipedia's strong commitment to providing a neutral point of view means that readers can trust content to be neutral and unbiased, explaining the many sides of every argument. The peer review editing process helps to ensure this. Wikipedia is also a repository of a wealth of information. Readers who don't understand some of the concepts mentioned in a piece of legislation or who have never heard of the federal agency being charged with a new task can easily follow the internal wikilinks to find out more information. Readers already use wikipedia to learn about proposed legislation and existing law, as the page view histories of the Affordable Care Act and CISPA demonstrate. Finally, according to Wikipedia:Purpose, "Wikipedia's purpose is to benefit readers by acting as an encyclopedia, a comprehensive written compendium that contains information on all branches of knowledge." The encyclopedia could not fulfill that purpose without including coverage of major legislation.
Several in-person events in the Washington D.C. area have been associated with this project.
On March 14 and 15, 2013, the Cato Institute, a United States-based think tank, hosted with Wikimedia DC a two day workshop event about transparency, legislative data, and Wikipedia. According to event sponsor Jim Harper, "transparency, and the hope with getting data on to Wikipedia, is meant to provide the public with neutral information tools that all communities can use to oversee the government and advocate for what they want." [6]
The Cato Institute has project, called "Deepbills", to produce enhanced XML markup of federal legislation. It hopes to use this data to make more information available to the public about how bills affect existing law, federal agencies, and spending. Cato has been marking up the bills introduced in the current Congress with “enhanced” XML that allows computers to automatically gather more of the meaning found in legislation. This project fundamentally rooted in transparency and building bridges among politically diverse organizations. Cato is seeking to produce data and systems that will broadly appeal to organizations and individuals across the political system: something that makes it easier to compile basic factual information in a transparent way. The Cato Institute sponsored this event for Wikipedians and people interested in transparency as a way to look for ways Cato's data could be used to enhance the information about legislation on Wikipedia.
For commentary on this, please visit the following:
On June 8, 2013, the Cato Institute hosted with Wikimedia DC a follow up [Wikipedia:Meetup/DC/Legislative Data meetup]] to check on the progress that had been made since the first Legislative Data Workshop and discuss new challenges that had been identified. Editors reviewed and offered suggestions on how to improve some of the articles found on the List of bills in the 113th United States Congress. Together, several editors created a new infobox template that includes additional fields to provide information about what agencies are affected by a bill, the total authorizations in a bill (permission to spend money), and the total appropriations in a bill (money distributed to agencies).
On August 18, 2014, the Cato Institute and Wikimedia DC will be holding a Hill Briefing for Congressional staff, members of Congress, and the general public. Senior Fellow of the Cato Institute, Jim Harper ( User:JimHarperDC), Legislative Researcher/Writer Michelle Newby ( User:HistoricMN44), and Wikimedia DC Public Policy member Jim Hayes ( User:Slowking4) were all scheduled to speak at the event. The event invite stated:
In a recent 90-day period, there were almost 400,000 hits on Wikipedia articles about bills pending in Congress. The collaboratively edited Internet encyclopedia is a major source of information about congressional activity for average Americans. But past editing controversies have caused some of the most knowledgeable potential editors — congressional staff — to steer clear of providing information to the public this way. Wikipedia could deliver government transparency on a grand scale, positioning the public to demand better outcomes. Congressional staffers can aid that process by learning how to edit Wikipedia and how to navigate its rules around notability, neutrality, and conflicts of interest. Join us for a discussion of congressional Wikipedia editing and the sea change to government transparency it might produce. [7]
Video of the event, running about an hour long, is available from both C-SPAN (where it was streamed live) and from the Cato Institute.
There are a number of tools and resources available for editors who want to edit Wikipedia to improve the quality or add to the number of articles on legislation or public laws.
General:
Sources of information on bills:
In order to improve the content of legislation articles on Wikipedia, we have worked up a proposed structure for such articles. The article should have an infobox that includes information about who introduced the bill, when, and its procedural history. The introduction section should provide information on the status of the bill as well as a summary of what it would do. A background section can/should be included to discuss general information the reader should have to place the bill in context. A provisions section should detail what the bill would do. Information from the public domain Congressional Research Service's report can often (but not always) be used here. (The summaries can be found at beta.congress.gov's individual page on that bill.) The summary should include wikilinks to the relevant concepts, prior laws, and government agencies. (That's the beauty of Wikipedia - if you are unfamiliar with something or some agency, knowledge about it is a simple click away!) If the Congressional Budget Office has done a report (check by searching [www.cbo.gov cbo.gov] that information can be included as well. The procedural history section should detail the bill's history - who introduced it, which committees it went to, if they held any hearings, what the committee report said, and any votes that were made. Finally, there should be a debate section offering information on the arguments for or against a bill from the bill's supporters and opponents. Since Wikipedia strives to be neutral, it's best if arguments from both sides are included, although this can be difficult. Often one side is significantly more vocal than the other, making sources about that side's opinion easier to find. Other times a bill is considered "non-controversial" (usually evident when it is passed by a voice vote or with unanimous consent) and there is very little opposition to it.
You can use this proposed sample layout to create a Wikipedia article on U.S. federal legislation:
Categories:
Templates:
In 2014, a Twitter bot called @ CongressEdits gained a lot of media attention for tweeting out a link every time someone using a Congressional IP address edited Wikipedia. Inspired by this bot, another bot, the @wikibills bot, was created. This bot tweets out a link everyone a person edits one of the articles on the List of bills in the 113th United States Congress. Make such an edit and you could become Twitter famous!
Given the goal of producing articles about legislation that can be updated automatically and systematically with legislative data, we offer these suggestions for the organization of legislative issues on Wikipedia and for writing articles about the bills in Congress.
Many articles about public policy issues come into existence and grow because of importance and public interest in a particular bill. If the issue isn't settled in a single Congress, however, the article's references to that bill will fall out of date even if much of the material in the article is relevant and accurate. In our early work, we have found, for example, that the current (March 2013) versions of articles on CISPA and the House budget refer to the past year's legislation. ('External' links are to March 2013 versions to illustrate this point.)
To remedy this, we recommend writing about public issues and the legislation that relates to them in a hierarchical way, separating the general issue and the legislative proposal from the specific bill(s) that relate to them. We'll describe the hierarchy starting from the top.
Given the importance of the issue area, it may be appropriate to have a top-level article at a very high level of generality. "Cybersecurity legislation in the United States" might be a good example. (There is an article called Cyber-security regulation that is a good high-level overview, if slightly dated for this rapidly changing area.)
The next level down might be an article on a general proposal, such as CISPA, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, which is one of several proposed federal statutes. Now, CISPA started as a single proposal, but it did not pass in the 112th Congress and has been reintroduced in the 113th Congress. The (current) article about CISPA is about the issue and the bill at the same time, even though the original CISPA bill is dead. This must be confusing to readers.
Articles about specific bills could complete the hierarchy, discussing things specific to those bills such as sponsor/cosponsors, committee referral, hearings, differences from other versions, key points in the debates about them, votes on them, their status at any given time, and so on.
This hierarchy - with separate articles for each of 1) the broadest issue area, 2) the general proposal, and 3) the specific bills - seems like the best way to articulate for readers how public policy issues are handled.
It will take a lot of work to untangle current articles that interlock given public policy issues and the bills (now dead) that dealt with them in the past. Going forward, we recommend maintaining separation among broad issues, legislative proposals, and the individual bills that address them. If a bill is important, it may merit as many as three articles: one about the bill itself, one about the proposal it contains, and one about broader issue it tries to address. Hopefully, articles about the higher-level topics exist already!
Members of the following groups may be interested in the activities of this WikiProject:
If you would like to list yourself as a participant in this project, please sign here:
... and many more, found at: List of bills in the 113th United States Congress.
The sheer volume of content […] is partly responsible for the site's dominance as an online reference. When compared to the top 3,200 educational reference sites in the US, Wikipedia is No. 1, capturing 24.3% of all visits to the category. Cf Bill Tancer (Global Manager, Hitwise), "Wikipedia, Search and School Homework", Hitwise, March 1, 2007.
Online encyclopedia Wikipedia has added about 20 million unique monthly visitors in the past year, making it the top online news and information destination, according to Nielsen//NetRatings.
This page provides support to Wikipedia editors who want to develop articles related to legislation in the United States Congress as it makes laws within the Federal Government of the United States. This project is an outgrowth of a conference in March 2013 in Washington DC: Wikipedia:Meetup/DC/Legislative Data Workshop. Wikipedia is the sixth most popular website [1] and constitutes the Internet's largest and most popular general reference work. [2] [3] [4] As of 2014, it has 18 billion page views and nearly 500 million unique visitors each month. [5] Americans already use it daily to find out information about current proposed legislation and existing public laws. This project is devoted to increasing and improving Wikipedia's coverage of those laws.
Wikipedia is an excellent place to host information about legislation. Wikipedia's strong commitment to providing a neutral point of view means that readers can trust content to be neutral and unbiased, explaining the many sides of every argument. The peer review editing process helps to ensure this. Wikipedia is also a repository of a wealth of information. Readers who don't understand some of the concepts mentioned in a piece of legislation or who have never heard of the federal agency being charged with a new task can easily follow the internal wikilinks to find out more information. Readers already use wikipedia to learn about proposed legislation and existing law, as the page view histories of the Affordable Care Act and CISPA demonstrate. Finally, according to Wikipedia:Purpose, "Wikipedia's purpose is to benefit readers by acting as an encyclopedia, a comprehensive written compendium that contains information on all branches of knowledge." The encyclopedia could not fulfill that purpose without including coverage of major legislation.
Several in-person events in the Washington D.C. area have been associated with this project.
On March 14 and 15, 2013, the Cato Institute, a United States-based think tank, hosted with Wikimedia DC a two day workshop event about transparency, legislative data, and Wikipedia. According to event sponsor Jim Harper, "transparency, and the hope with getting data on to Wikipedia, is meant to provide the public with neutral information tools that all communities can use to oversee the government and advocate for what they want." [6]
The Cato Institute has project, called "Deepbills", to produce enhanced XML markup of federal legislation. It hopes to use this data to make more information available to the public about how bills affect existing law, federal agencies, and spending. Cato has been marking up the bills introduced in the current Congress with “enhanced” XML that allows computers to automatically gather more of the meaning found in legislation. This project fundamentally rooted in transparency and building bridges among politically diverse organizations. Cato is seeking to produce data and systems that will broadly appeal to organizations and individuals across the political system: something that makes it easier to compile basic factual information in a transparent way. The Cato Institute sponsored this event for Wikipedians and people interested in transparency as a way to look for ways Cato's data could be used to enhance the information about legislation on Wikipedia.
For commentary on this, please visit the following:
On June 8, 2013, the Cato Institute hosted with Wikimedia DC a follow up [Wikipedia:Meetup/DC/Legislative Data meetup]] to check on the progress that had been made since the first Legislative Data Workshop and discuss new challenges that had been identified. Editors reviewed and offered suggestions on how to improve some of the articles found on the List of bills in the 113th United States Congress. Together, several editors created a new infobox template that includes additional fields to provide information about what agencies are affected by a bill, the total authorizations in a bill (permission to spend money), and the total appropriations in a bill (money distributed to agencies).
On August 18, 2014, the Cato Institute and Wikimedia DC will be holding a Hill Briefing for Congressional staff, members of Congress, and the general public. Senior Fellow of the Cato Institute, Jim Harper ( User:JimHarperDC), Legislative Researcher/Writer Michelle Newby ( User:HistoricMN44), and Wikimedia DC Public Policy member Jim Hayes ( User:Slowking4) were all scheduled to speak at the event. The event invite stated:
In a recent 90-day period, there were almost 400,000 hits on Wikipedia articles about bills pending in Congress. The collaboratively edited Internet encyclopedia is a major source of information about congressional activity for average Americans. But past editing controversies have caused some of the most knowledgeable potential editors — congressional staff — to steer clear of providing information to the public this way. Wikipedia could deliver government transparency on a grand scale, positioning the public to demand better outcomes. Congressional staffers can aid that process by learning how to edit Wikipedia and how to navigate its rules around notability, neutrality, and conflicts of interest. Join us for a discussion of congressional Wikipedia editing and the sea change to government transparency it might produce. [7]
Video of the event, running about an hour long, is available from both C-SPAN (where it was streamed live) and from the Cato Institute.
There are a number of tools and resources available for editors who want to edit Wikipedia to improve the quality or add to the number of articles on legislation or public laws.
General:
Sources of information on bills:
In order to improve the content of legislation articles on Wikipedia, we have worked up a proposed structure for such articles. The article should have an infobox that includes information about who introduced the bill, when, and its procedural history. The introduction section should provide information on the status of the bill as well as a summary of what it would do. A background section can/should be included to discuss general information the reader should have to place the bill in context. A provisions section should detail what the bill would do. Information from the public domain Congressional Research Service's report can often (but not always) be used here. (The summaries can be found at beta.congress.gov's individual page on that bill.) The summary should include wikilinks to the relevant concepts, prior laws, and government agencies. (That's the beauty of Wikipedia - if you are unfamiliar with something or some agency, knowledge about it is a simple click away!) If the Congressional Budget Office has done a report (check by searching [www.cbo.gov cbo.gov] that information can be included as well. The procedural history section should detail the bill's history - who introduced it, which committees it went to, if they held any hearings, what the committee report said, and any votes that were made. Finally, there should be a debate section offering information on the arguments for or against a bill from the bill's supporters and opponents. Since Wikipedia strives to be neutral, it's best if arguments from both sides are included, although this can be difficult. Often one side is significantly more vocal than the other, making sources about that side's opinion easier to find. Other times a bill is considered "non-controversial" (usually evident when it is passed by a voice vote or with unanimous consent) and there is very little opposition to it.
You can use this proposed sample layout to create a Wikipedia article on U.S. federal legislation:
Categories:
Templates:
In 2014, a Twitter bot called @ CongressEdits gained a lot of media attention for tweeting out a link every time someone using a Congressional IP address edited Wikipedia. Inspired by this bot, another bot, the @wikibills bot, was created. This bot tweets out a link everyone a person edits one of the articles on the List of bills in the 113th United States Congress. Make such an edit and you could become Twitter famous!
Given the goal of producing articles about legislation that can be updated automatically and systematically with legislative data, we offer these suggestions for the organization of legislative issues on Wikipedia and for writing articles about the bills in Congress.
Many articles about public policy issues come into existence and grow because of importance and public interest in a particular bill. If the issue isn't settled in a single Congress, however, the article's references to that bill will fall out of date even if much of the material in the article is relevant and accurate. In our early work, we have found, for example, that the current (March 2013) versions of articles on CISPA and the House budget refer to the past year's legislation. ('External' links are to March 2013 versions to illustrate this point.)
To remedy this, we recommend writing about public issues and the legislation that relates to them in a hierarchical way, separating the general issue and the legislative proposal from the specific bill(s) that relate to them. We'll describe the hierarchy starting from the top.
Given the importance of the issue area, it may be appropriate to have a top-level article at a very high level of generality. "Cybersecurity legislation in the United States" might be a good example. (There is an article called Cyber-security regulation that is a good high-level overview, if slightly dated for this rapidly changing area.)
The next level down might be an article on a general proposal, such as CISPA, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, which is one of several proposed federal statutes. Now, CISPA started as a single proposal, but it did not pass in the 112th Congress and has been reintroduced in the 113th Congress. The (current) article about CISPA is about the issue and the bill at the same time, even though the original CISPA bill is dead. This must be confusing to readers.
Articles about specific bills could complete the hierarchy, discussing things specific to those bills such as sponsor/cosponsors, committee referral, hearings, differences from other versions, key points in the debates about them, votes on them, their status at any given time, and so on.
This hierarchy - with separate articles for each of 1) the broadest issue area, 2) the general proposal, and 3) the specific bills - seems like the best way to articulate for readers how public policy issues are handled.
It will take a lot of work to untangle current articles that interlock given public policy issues and the bills (now dead) that dealt with them in the past. Going forward, we recommend maintaining separation among broad issues, legislative proposals, and the individual bills that address them. If a bill is important, it may merit as many as three articles: one about the bill itself, one about the proposal it contains, and one about broader issue it tries to address. Hopefully, articles about the higher-level topics exist already!
Members of the following groups may be interested in the activities of this WikiProject:
If you would like to list yourself as a participant in this project, please sign here:
... and many more, found at: List of bills in the 113th United States Congress.
The sheer volume of content […] is partly responsible for the site's dominance as an online reference. When compared to the top 3,200 educational reference sites in the US, Wikipedia is No. 1, capturing 24.3% of all visits to the category. Cf Bill Tancer (Global Manager, Hitwise), "Wikipedia, Search and School Homework", Hitwise, March 1, 2007.
Online encyclopedia Wikipedia has added about 20 million unique monthly visitors in the past year, making it the top online news and information destination, according to Nielsen//NetRatings.