The Concept for the Development of Civil Society (EKAK) was adopted on 12 December 2002 after a long period of discussions.
Daimar Liiv
University of Tartu Ph.D. candidate
Siim Kallas | Presentation in the Riigikogu at the 1st Reading of the Draft State Budget Act 2000 |
|
Kalle Jürgenson | State Budget 2000, What and Why? |
|
Olev Raju | Commentaries on the State Budget 2000 |
Madis Võõras | Estonia on the Way to Full Membership of the European Space Agency |
|
Ene Ergma | Estonia Has Become a Space State |
Urve Läänemets | A Good Teacher Should Be Ready to Learn Also from the Pupils |
|
Külli Eichenbaum | Using the Local Peculiarities of Old Võromaa |
The Concept for the Development of Civil Society (EKAK) was adopted on 12 December 2002 after a long period of discussions.
Application of information and communication technology in public administration will ring great changes in the arrangements of public administration and set new requirements in front of the institutions executing public power.
The preparation of the Estonian Civil Society Development Concept (see http://www.ngo.ee) began in the early summer of 1999 with the aim of contributing to the development of a contemporary society of citizens and regulating the relations between the public and the non-profit sector.1