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The UN System & NYC Government Technology: A Guide for City Tech Leadership

The UN System & NYC Government Technology: A Guide for City Tech Leadership

Executive Summary

New York City hosts the headquarters of the United Nations and dozens of its agencies — yet the technology teams running city government rarely interact with the digital innovation happening a few miles uptown at UN Plaza. This guide maps out specific UN programs, events, and frameworks that NYC government technology and operations leaders can participate in, learn from, and contribute to.

The opportunities fall into three categories:

  1. Open source & digital infrastructure — The UN is building a global open-source ecosystem that NYC can both leverage and lead within
  2. Urban governance & smart cities — UN-Habitat and allied programs are creating frameworks for data-driven, digitally inclusive cities
  3. Events & convenings — Multiple annual events take place in NYC, requiring zero travel investment

1. UN Open Source Principles

What it is

A set of principles for open-source software development, use, and distribution adopted by the UN Chief Executive Board's Digital Technology Network (DTN). As of mid-2025, over 60 organizations have endorsed them, including the Open Source Initiative (first endorser, Feb 2025) and the Government of France.

Why it matters for NYC

  • Signal leadership — NYC would be among the first U.S. municipal governments to endorse, joining France at the national level
  • Align with existing practice — NYC already publishes code on GitHub and contributes to open-source projects
  • Create a bridge — Endorsement opens a formal relationship with the UN's digital technology network

How to participate

  1. Review the principles at unopensource.org
  2. Submit a formal endorsement through the UN's Digital Technology Network
  3. Announce the endorsement at UN Open Source Week

2. UN Open Source Week — June 22–26, 2026

📍 In NYC — UN Headquarters

What it is

An annual week-long event at UN Headquarters in New York City, organized by the UN Office for Digital and Emerging Technologies (ODET) and the Office of Information and Communications Technology (OICT). The 2026 agenda:

DayFocus
Monday, June 22Community Hackathon
Tuesday, June 23Open Source × AI (new for 2026)
Wednesday, June 24Digital Public Infrastructure Day
Thursday, June 25OSPOs for Good
Friday, June 26Community-led side events

Why it matters for NYC

This event happens in your city. It brings together hundreds of technologists, policymakers, and open-source leaders — a 15-minute subway ride from City Hall. NYC tech leaders can:

  • Present NYC's open-source work — Showcase tools NYC has built
  • Participate in the hackathon — Send developers to collaborate on Digital Public Goods
  • Host a side event — Friday is reserved for community events
  • Recruit talent and ideas — Connect with the UN's global developer community

How to participate

  1. Register at unopensource.org
  2. Contact ODET to propose a city-led side event or panel
  3. Send a delegation of 5–10 from OTI, Cyber Command, and agency IT leads

3. Open Source Program Office (OSPO)

What it is

A dedicated unit within an organization that guides open-source adoption, manages licensing, develops digital skills, and coordinates contributions to the open-source ecosystem. The UNDP has integrated OSPOs into its strategy, and the "OSPOs for Good" initiative focuses on public-sector OSPOs.

Why NYC should establish one

  • Centralize governance — Coordinate licensing, security audits, and contribution policies across 130+ agencies
  • Adopt Digital Public Goods — Leverage UN-vetted open-source tools from the DPG Registry instead of buying proprietary alternatives
  • Join a global network — Connect with OSPOs at the UN, EU Commission, and France
  • Support the UN Common Policy Framework (released Nov 2024 by ITU) — the blueprint for this kind of institutional setup

How to participate

  1. Attend "OSPOs for Good" sessions at UN Open Source Week (June 25, 2026)
  2. Connect with UNDP's digital team to learn from their implementation
  3. Pilot a lightweight OSPO within OTI — start with an inventory of existing open-source usage

4. UN-Habitat: Global Alliance of Mayors for Digital Cooperation

What it is

Launched in 2023 by the UN Secretary-General's Envoy on Technology and UN-Habitat, the GAM-4-DC brings together mayors worldwide to collaborate on using digital technologies to advance the SDGs and improve urban governance.

NYC is already connected. The city is a founding member of the related Cities Coalition for Digital Rights (co-founded by NYC, Amsterdam, and Barcelona in 2018, now 45+ cities). The GAM-4-DC extends this into operational digital cooperation.

Why it matters for NYC

  • Peer learning — Direct exchange with Barcelona, Amsterdam, Seoul, and Helsinki on digital service delivery and AI governance
  • Influence global standards — NYC's experience with 311, open data, and digital equity can shape UN guidance to other cities
  • Mayoral visibility — Positions the Mayor's tech agenda on a global stage

How to participate

  1. The Mayor's Office for International Affairs is the natural liaison
  2. Request formal engagement through the UN Secretary-General's Envoy on Technology
  3. Propose a NYC-hosted convening during UN General Assembly week

5. World Urban Forum 13 — Baku, May 17–22, 2026

What it is

The world's largest conference on sustainable urbanization, organized by UN-Habitat. WUF13 focuses on "Housing the World: Safe and Resilient Cities and Communities" with significant programming on digital transformation, data-driven governance, and smart city infrastructure.

Why it matters for NYC

  • Digital governance track — Sessions on data-driven cities match NYC's analytics infrastructure
  • Housing × tech — HPD and NYCHA face the same challenges discussed at WUF
  • Smart city showcase — NYC's 311, LinkNYC, and open data portal are world-class examples
  • 10,000+ urban leaders from 160+ countries

How to participate

  1. Register a delegation at wuf.unhabitat.org
  2. Submit abstracts for side sessions showcasing NYC tech
  3. Join the Smart Cities Council delegation
  4. Coordinate with the Mayor's Office for International Affairs

Additional Opportunities

Digital Public Goods Alliance (DPGA)

A multi-stakeholder initiative (UNDP, UNICEF, Norway) maintaining a registry of vetted open-source software, data, AI models, and standards. In 2025, DPGA launched "DPI Essentials for Public Sector Leaders" — short courses designed for government tech leaders.

NYC action: Nominate NYC-built tools to the DPG Registry. Survey the registry for tools NYC could adopt. Enroll OTI leadership in DPI Essentials courses.

digitalpublicgoods.net

GovStack — Modular Digital Government

A UN-backed initiative (ITU, GIZ, Estonia) providing reusable "building block" specifications for common government digital services — identity, payments, data exchange, registries, consent management.

NYC action: Use GovStack's building-block approach to inform how the city standardizes shared services across 130+ agencies.

govstack.global

UN Global Compact Leaders Summit — NYC, Sept 22–23, 2026

📍 In NYC

A major summit on sustainable business and climate-resilient growth during UNGA week. Directly intersects with Local Law 97 compliance and NYC's green economy plan.

NYC action: Send procurement and sustainability leads. Connect with vendors committed to sustainable practices.

unglobalcompact.org

Internet Governance Forum (IGF)

In December 2025, member states voted to make the IGF a permanent UN forum. Covers digital inclusion, AI governance, cybersecurity, and human rights online.

NYC action: Present NYC's digital equity programs and influence how internet governance frameworks address municipal priorities.


Calendar Summary

DateEventLocationNYC Action
May 17–22, 2026World Urban Forum 13Baku, AzerbaijanSend delegation, present NYC tech
June 22–26, 2026UN Open Source WeekUN HQ, NYCPresent, hackathon, side event
Sept 9–25, 2026UNGA 81 + Science SummitUN HQ, NYCAlign city events with UNGA week
Sept 22–23, 2026UN Global Compact SummitNYCProcurement + sustainability leads
OngoingDPI Essentials coursesOnlineEnroll OTI leadership
OngoingGAM-4-DCVirtual + eventsFormalize NYC membership

Recommended First Steps

  1. Endorse the UN Open Source Principles — Low effort, high signal. Position NYC as a leader among U.S. municipal governments.
  2. Send a delegation to UN Open Source Week (June 22–26, 2026) — It's in your city. No flights needed.
  3. Establish a lightweight OSPO — Start with an inventory of what NYC already uses and contributes to open source.
  4. Enroll leaders in DPI Essentials — Quick professional development win for OTI staff and agency CIOs.
  5. Propose a NYC side event during UNGA — Tech-focused, co-hosted with the Mayor's Office for International Affairs.

This guide was prepared by WeGovNYC, a nonprofit program of Sarapis, dedicated to making New York City the world's best municipal government.

The UN System & NYC Government Technology: A Guide for City Tech Leadership | WeGovNYC Blog