Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience

The open data moving is gathering steam globally, and it has the potential to transform relationships between citizens, the private sector and government. To date, little or no attention has been given to the particular challenge of realizing the benefits of open data within in an officially bi- or...

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Main Authors: Teresa Scassa, Niki Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Danube-University Krems 2015-10-01
Series:JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/358
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spelling doaj-3736b6badfe74781a8083cfddd689bb82020-11-25T02:04:18ZengDanube-University KremsJeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government2075-95172015-10-017110.29379/jedem.v7i1.358217Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian ExperienceTeresa Scassa0Niki Singh1University of Ottawa, Faculty of LawUniversity of Ottawa, Faculty of Law The open data moving is gathering steam globally, and it has the potential to transform relationships between citizens, the private sector and government. To date, little or no attention has been given to the particular challenge of realizing the benefits of open data within in an officially bi- or multi-lingual jurisdiction. Using the efforts and obligations of the Canadian federal government as a case study, the authors identify the challenges posed by developing and implementing an open data agenda within an officially bilingual state. Key concerns include (1) whether governments may use open data to outsource some information analysis and information services to an unregulated private sector through open data initiatives, thus directly or indirectly avoiding obligations to provide information analysis and information tools in official languages; and (2) whether the rush by governments to support the innovation agenda of open data may leave minority language communities both underserved and under-included in the development and use of open data. https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/358Open dataopen governmentbilingualismmultilingualismofficial languages
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Teresa Scassa
Niki Singh
spellingShingle Teresa Scassa
Niki Singh
Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
Open data
open government
bilingualism
multilingualism
official languages
author_facet Teresa Scassa
Niki Singh
author_sort Teresa Scassa
title Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
title_short Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
title_full Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
title_fullStr Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
title_full_unstemmed Open Data and Official Language Regimes: An Examination of the Canadian Experience
title_sort open data and official language regimes: an examination of the canadian experience
publisher Danube-University Krems
series JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
issn 2075-9517
publishDate 2015-10-01
description The open data moving is gathering steam globally, and it has the potential to transform relationships between citizens, the private sector and government. To date, little or no attention has been given to the particular challenge of realizing the benefits of open data within in an officially bi- or multi-lingual jurisdiction. Using the efforts and obligations of the Canadian federal government as a case study, the authors identify the challenges posed by developing and implementing an open data agenda within an officially bilingual state. Key concerns include (1) whether governments may use open data to outsource some information analysis and information services to an unregulated private sector through open data initiatives, thus directly or indirectly avoiding obligations to provide information analysis and information tools in official languages; and (2) whether the rush by governments to support the innovation agenda of open data may leave minority language communities both underserved and under-included in the development and use of open data.
topic Open data
open government
bilingualism
multilingualism
official languages
url https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/358
work_keys_str_mv AT teresascassa opendataandofficiallanguageregimesanexaminationofthecanadianexperience
AT nikisingh opendataandofficiallanguageregimesanexaminationofthecanadianexperience
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