Letting the public in

Among the raft of information systems (IS) applications developed for use by local governments are those that attempt to introduce more open community engagement (CE) and facilitate e-democracy. In this paper, we report on a longitudinal study that reveals how the open nature of e-democracy challen...

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Main Authors: Helen Hasan, Henry Linger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australasian Association for Information Systems 2020-10-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1897
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spelling doaj-4ab89f4a7de346b0826f4d93ea56fafb2021-08-02T14:44:26ZengAustralasian Association for Information SystemsAustralasian Journal of Information Systems1449-86182020-10-012410.3127/ajis.v24i0.1897Letting the public inHelen Hasan0Henry Linger1University of WollongongMonash University Among the raft of information systems (IS) applications developed for use by local governments are those that attempt to introduce more open community engagement (CE) and facilitate e-democracy. In this paper, we report on a longitudinal study that reveals how the open nature of e-democracy challenges the practices of government bureaucracies. In 2012, we partnered with the Community Engagement Team of a Local Government Council in Australia, to study their planning for, and use of, IS for CE. Our study involved an action research intervention to gain a rich understanding of the contradictory demands of the bureaucratic imperative of the Council and the informal activities of the community. This was the first step of a longitudinal qualitative study of the Council’s e- democracy efforts over the ensuing seven years. Our analysis has been conducted through a dialectic lens, informed by the Cynefin sense-making framework. Our theoretical contribution is an e-Democracy Framework that incorporates the dialectic between the ordered environment of government and the community view that is ill-defined and unordered. As a practical contribution, government organisations can use the Framework to assess the current status of their CE and design a CE strategy to make interactions with civil society more meaningful. https://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1897Open GovernmentCommunity EngagementE-democracyAction research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen Hasan
Henry Linger
spellingShingle Helen Hasan
Henry Linger
Letting the public in
Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Open Government
Community Engagement
E-democracy
Action research
author_facet Helen Hasan
Henry Linger
author_sort Helen Hasan
title Letting the public in
title_short Letting the public in
title_full Letting the public in
title_fullStr Letting the public in
title_full_unstemmed Letting the public in
title_sort letting the public in
publisher Australasian Association for Information Systems
series Australasian Journal of Information Systems
issn 1449-8618
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Among the raft of information systems (IS) applications developed for use by local governments are those that attempt to introduce more open community engagement (CE) and facilitate e-democracy. In this paper, we report on a longitudinal study that reveals how the open nature of e-democracy challenges the practices of government bureaucracies. In 2012, we partnered with the Community Engagement Team of a Local Government Council in Australia, to study their planning for, and use of, IS for CE. Our study involved an action research intervention to gain a rich understanding of the contradictory demands of the bureaucratic imperative of the Council and the informal activities of the community. This was the first step of a longitudinal qualitative study of the Council’s e- democracy efforts over the ensuing seven years. Our analysis has been conducted through a dialectic lens, informed by the Cynefin sense-making framework. Our theoretical contribution is an e-Democracy Framework that incorporates the dialectic between the ordered environment of government and the community view that is ill-defined and unordered. As a practical contribution, government organisations can use the Framework to assess the current status of their CE and design a CE strategy to make interactions with civil society more meaningful.
topic Open Government
Community Engagement
E-democracy
Action research
url https://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/1897
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