
Stairs often are meeting points of materials on one hand and playing field of light and dark on the other hand. Here a part of the stairs in the Pousada in the city of Porto.

Stairs often are meeting points of materials on one hand and playing field of light and dark on the other hand. Here a part of the stairs in the Pousada in the city of Porto.

Walking through the streets of Lucca, we saw this piece of renewed insight. Change of perspective, change of window. This wall tells its story.

For our care related to health and well-being every citizen will experience the different fields and offices for finding and contracting. In fact the landscape is segmented, divided by roads (white) and system borders (black). The fields of pink are that of care and blue as the color of (the collection of) governments where citizens have to deal with.

The walls of some houses in the inner city of Verona – Citta’ Antica – are true pieces of art. This is one. The yellows and the light blue creates a soft palette. It is a place where nature meets architecture.
Book by Cass R. Sunstein
How can government be more “user-friendly”, simple and efficient by streamlining and reforming government regulation and rule-making?
This book is about making things simpler, how governments can be much better, and do much better, if they make people’s lives easier and get rid of unnecessary complexity. “…simpler government can be found in new initiatives that save money and time, improve health, and lengthen lives” (Simon & Schuster).
In this book the author Cass R. Sunstein shares his experiences from 2009 to 2012 when he was Administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in the Obama Administration. His theories shaped the Obama administration and the American nation. In this interview (Brookings) Sunstein lines out his main findings and focus.
Published in 2013 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.