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Passive crowdsourcing in government using social media

Yannis Charalabidis (Department of Information and Communication Systems Engineering, University of the Aegean, Samos, Greece)
Euripidis N. Loukis (Department of Information and Communication Systems Engineering, University of the Aegean, Samos, Greece)
Aggeliki Androutsopoulou (Department of Information and Communication Systems Engineering, University of the Aegean, Samos, Greece)
Vangelis Karkaletsis (National Center for Scientific Research “Demokritos”, Athens, Greece)
Anna Triantafillou (Innovation Lab, Athens Technology Center, Athens, Greece)

Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy

ISSN: 1750-6166

Article publication date: 13 May 2014

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to develop a novel approach to e-participation, which is based on “passive crowdsourcing” by government agencies, exploiting the extensive political content continuously created in numerous Web 2.0 social media (e.g. political blogs and microblogs, news sharing sites and online forums) by citizens without government stimulation, to understand better their needs, issues, opinions, proposals and arguments concerning a particular domain of government activity or public policy.

Design/methodology/approach

This approach is developed and elaborated through cooperation with potential users experienced in the design of public policies from three countries (Austria, Greece and the UK), using a combination of quantitative and qualitative techniques: co-operative development of application scenarios, questionnaire surveys, focus groups and workshops and, finally, in-depth interviews.

Findings

A process model for the application of the proposed passive crowdsourcing approach has been developed, which is quite different from the one of the usual active crowdsourcing. Based on it, the functional architecture of the required supporting information and communication technologies (ICT) infrastructure has been formulated, and then its technological architecture has been designed, addressing the conflicting requirements: low response time and, at the same time, provision of sufficiently “fresh” content for policymakers.

Practical implications

Taking into account that traditionally government agencies monitor what the press writes about them, our research provides a basis for extending efficiently these activities in the new electronic media world (e.g. newspapers websites, blogs and microblogs, online forums, etc.) to understand better the needs, issues, opinions, arguments and proposals raised by the society with respect to important domains of government activity and public policies.

Social implications

The proposed approach provides a new channel for the “voice” of the society to be directly communicated to the government so that the latter can design its policies and activities based on the social needs and realities and not on oversimplified models and stereotypes.

Originality/value

Our paper proposes a novel approach to e-participation, which exploits the Web 2.0 social media – but in a quite different way from previous approaches – for conducting “passive crowdsourcing”, and elaborates it: it develops an application process model for it and also an ICT infrastructure for supporting it, which are quite different from the ones of the existing “active crowdsourcing” approaches.

Keywords

Citation

Charalabidis, Y., N. Loukis, E., Androutsopoulou, A., Karkaletsis, V. and Triantafillou, A. (2014), "Passive crowdsourcing in government using social media", Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy, Vol. 8 No. 2, pp. 283-308. https://doi.org/10.1108/TG-09-2013-0035

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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