Abstract

Open data and its effects on society are always woven into infrastructural legacies, social relations, and the political economy. This raises questions about how our understanding and engagement with open data shifts when we focus on its situated use. To shed a light on these questions, Situating Open Data provides several empirical accounts of open data practices, the local implementation of global initiatives, and the development of new open data ecosystems. Drawing on case studies in different countries and contexts, the chapters demonstrate the practices and actors involved in open government data initiatives unfolding within different socio-political settings. The book proposes three recommendations for researchers, policy-makers and practitioners. First, beyond upskilling through data literacy programmes, open data initiatives should be specified through the kinds of data practices and effects they generate. Second, global visions of open data implementation require more studies of the resonances and tensions created in localised initiatives. And third, research into open data ecosystems requires more attention to the histories and legacies of information infrastructures and how these shape who benefits from open data flows. As such, this volume departs from the framing of data as a resource to be deployed. Instead, it proposes a prism of different data practices in different contexts through which to study the social relations, capacities, infrastructural histories and power structures affecting open data initiatives. It is hoped that the contributions collected in Situating Open Data will spark critical reflection about the way open data is locally practiced and implemented. The contributions should be of interest to open data researchers, advocates, and those in or advising government administrations designing and rolling out effective open data initiatives.

Highlights

  • The Open Data Research Symposium (ODRS) is a bi-annual gathering designed to provide a space for researchers working on open data to reflect critically on their findings and to apply and advance theories that explain the dynamics of open data as a socially constructed phenomenon and practice

  • We extend the findings of Mejabi et al (2014) by: first, examining in some detail the processes by which journalists carry out this role; second, unearthing those factors that limit and undermine their ability to do so; and, third, determining how these factors affect the broad spectrum of intermediation within the open data ecosystem

  • Since the main interest of this study is open government data, we focus on data journalists who assume the role of open data intermediaries because the data with which they carry out the processes outlined above flow from the government as primary suppliers to citizens as end-users

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Open Data Research Symposium (ODRS) is a bi-annual gathering designed to provide a space for researchers working on open data to reflect critically on their findings and to apply and advance theories that explain the dynamics of open data as a socially constructed phenomenon and practice. ODRS is usually organised alongside the International Open Data Conference (IODC) as a way for researchers to present their latest work, learn about other projects in the open data space and brainstorm new ideas. For the 2018 edition of the symposium, the organisers received a total of 30 extended abstracts of which 12 were accepted for presentation in Buenos Aires. Authors were required to submit full papers of their abstracts one week ahead of the symposium, and these papers were shared with those who had registered for the symposium. After the symposium, accepted authors were invited to revise and submit full papers for consideration in this edited volume. Papers underwent double-blind review by at least two peers, and authors were required to revise their papers before being accepted for publication

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call