Public & Urban Systems.
A systems lens on the institutions that serve the public: policy analysis, urban informatics, and ICT for development.
Cities and public institutions are the original complex systems.
Public systems concentrate every difficulty the firm exists for: many actors, long delays, contested measurement, and consequences that compound. They are also where systems science has the longest track record — and where the firm's intellectual roots run deepest, through urban informatics and ICT for development.
Disnesta works with governments, multilaterals, and public-serving institutions on the questions where technology, policy, and infrastructure meet: how a city instruments itself, how a ministry allocates compute and connectivity, how a public program measures what it changes.
The work connects naturally to the firm's instruments — NACI for compute readiness and OWI for the machine–human balance of work — and to the government practice more broadly.
Four areas of work.
Technology & policy analysis
Systems analysis for public technology decisions: compute, connectivity, digital services, and workforce.
Urban informatics
Instrumentation and analytics for cities — the measurement layer that lets an urban system watch itself.
ICT for development
Digital infrastructure and program design for developing-economy contexts, grounded in delivery experience rather than theory.
Public digital systems
Design and build of the platforms behind public programs, to standards that survive audits and administrations.
Ways to work with the firm.
Policy engagements
Analysis and decision support for ministries, multilaterals, and city governments.
Public instruments
Measurement constructs and readings for public programs, from indices to evaluation frameworks.
Systems delivery
The platforms and data systems behind the policy, delivered by Disnesta Labs.