\section{The Case Study} \label{sec:case} The project to evolve the Brazilian Public Software Portal \cite{meirelles2017spb} was a partnership between government and academia held between 2014 and 2016. To solve maintenance problems and fill design-reality gaps in the portal, the Ministry of Planning (MPOG) joined the University of Brasília (UnB) and the University of São Paulo (USP) to develop a platform with features and technologies novelties in the government context. %TODO: - Ainda não se falou de ferramentas integradas. Deve ser apresentado o novo SPB (de forma simples e direta como fizemos no IEEE) para se entender a complexidade do projeto/caso The academic team carried out development activities in the Advanced Laboratory of Production, Research and Innovation in Software Engineering (LAPPIS) of UnB. The project management and development process in this laboratory is usually executed adopting free software practices and agile approach. For this project, a total of 42 undergraduate students, two MSc students and two coordinator-professors participated in the development team. Six IT professionals were also hired as senior developers due their vast experiences in Front-end/UX or in one of the softwares integrated to the platform. The government team was composed of a director, a coordinator, and two IT analysts from a department of MPOG. Although it was responsible for the execution of this collaboration project, this department generally does not execute development of ministry's software. This department is responsible for contracting and homologating software development services and follows traditional management approaches, such as the RUP. These two aforementioned teams periodically met in person for the purpose of managing the project progress. These meetings initially only took place at the ministry's headquarters to discuss strategic/political and technical goals. These meetings were held monthly with the presence of two UnB professors, the executive-secretary of the Presidency (project supporter) and all MPOG members responsible for the project. The management of the development team was concentrated in the academia side. The workflow was organized in Redmine in biweekly sprints and 4-month releases, with intermediate deliveries hosted in university environment. However, with the progress of the project, this format proved to be inefficient. Conflicts between the internal management processes and differences in pace and goals of each institution were compromising the platform development. In this case study, we focus on analyzing the dynamics between government and academia for collaborative development. We aim to map the practices adopted in the project management and development process to harmonize the cultural and organizational differences of the institutions involved.