Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada

City governments around the world are developing and expanding how they connect to citizens. Technologies play an important role in making this connection, and one frequent way that cities connect with citizens is through 311-style request systems. 311 is a non-emergency municipal notification syste...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qing Lu, Peter A. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2016-06-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
311
VGI
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/621
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spelling doaj-2fa8717656c543ee9e7c510b8bf58e702020-11-25T01:38:05ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352016-06-0112183110.17645/up.v1i2.621300Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, CanadaQing Lu0Peter A. Johnson1Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, CanadaDepartment of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, CanadaCity governments around the world are developing and expanding how they connect to citizens. Technologies play an important role in making this connection, and one frequent way that cities connect with citizens is through 311-style request systems. 311 is a non-emergency municipal notification system that uses telephone, email, web forms, and increasingly, mobile applications to allow citizens to notify government of infrastructure issues and make requests for municipal services. In many ways, this process of citizen contribution mirrors the provision of volunteered geographic information, that is spatially-referenced user generated content. This research presents a case study of the city of Edmonton, Canada, an early adopter of multi-channel 311 service request systems, including telephone, email, web form, and mobile app 311 request channels. Three methods of analysis are used to characterize and compare these different channels over three years of request data; a comparison of relative request share for each channel, a spatial hot spot analysis, and regression models to compare channel usage with sociodemographic variables. The results of this study indicate a shift in channel usage from traditional to Internet-enabled, that this shift is mirrored in the hotspots of request activity, and that specific digital inequalities exist that reinforce this distinction between traditional and Internet-enabled reporting channels.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/621311digital dividemobile appmunicipal governmentopen dataVGI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qing Lu
Peter A. Johnson
spellingShingle Qing Lu
Peter A. Johnson
Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
Urban Planning
311
digital divide
mobile app
municipal government
open data
VGI
author_facet Qing Lu
Peter A. Johnson
author_sort Qing Lu
title Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
title_short Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
title_full Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
title_fullStr Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing New Channels of Communication: A Case Study of Municipal 311 Requests in Edmonton, Canada
title_sort characterizing new channels of communication: a case study of municipal 311 requests in edmonton, canada
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2016-06-01
description City governments around the world are developing and expanding how they connect to citizens. Technologies play an important role in making this connection, and one frequent way that cities connect with citizens is through 311-style request systems. 311 is a non-emergency municipal notification system that uses telephone, email, web forms, and increasingly, mobile applications to allow citizens to notify government of infrastructure issues and make requests for municipal services. In many ways, this process of citizen contribution mirrors the provision of volunteered geographic information, that is spatially-referenced user generated content. This research presents a case study of the city of Edmonton, Canada, an early adopter of multi-channel 311 service request systems, including telephone, email, web form, and mobile app 311 request channels. Three methods of analysis are used to characterize and compare these different channels over three years of request data; a comparison of relative request share for each channel, a spatial hot spot analysis, and regression models to compare channel usage with sociodemographic variables. The results of this study indicate a shift in channel usage from traditional to Internet-enabled, that this shift is mirrored in the hotspots of request activity, and that specific digital inequalities exist that reinforce this distinction between traditional and Internet-enabled reporting channels.
topic 311
digital divide
mobile app
municipal government
open data
VGI
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/621
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AT peterajohnson characterizingnewchannelsofcommunicationacasestudyofmunicipal311requestsinedmontoncanada
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