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[ecrea] CfP "Policy lessons from a decade of eGovernment, eHealth & eInclusion" - European Journal of ePractice
Wed Jul 20 09:56:46 GMT 2011
Call for papers
*European Journal of ePractice
Policy lessons from a decade of eGovernment, eHealth & eInclusion*
http://www.epractice.eu/en/node/5284341
Deadline: 25 August 2011
Policy lessons from a decade of eGovernment, eHealth, and eInclusion
Europe has had many information society strategies, eEurope (1999),
i2010 (2005) and Digital Agenda for Europe (2010). eGovernment, eHealth,
and eInclusion are the three policy sub-domains comprising the societal
public services pillar which is the backbone of all of these strategic
frameworks.
Given the emphasis that the new overarching EU2020 Strategy places on
tackling grand societal challenges and turning them into economic
opportunities, the relevance of these three domains is today even higher
than in the past. Inclusive Innovation is often called the I2 paradigm.
It is, thus, of the uttermost importance today to take stock of what has
been achieved, not simply for reasons of accountability of public
spending, but also in order to derive lessons and insights that can
improve the efforts towards 2020.
A large body of secondary and primary data exists on outcomes of such
policies for the users and the administrations and on the drivers and
barriers for this kind of ICT enabled administrative and social
innovation. Yet, we still do not have conclusive evidence and
interpretative frameworks to guide the design of future policies and
investments.
Alongside cases of success, we can find several instances of
counter-intuitive results and of intentional or unintentional policy
resistance. For instance, why the phenomenal growth in the supply of
eGovernment services has not been followed by a comparable growth in
usage of such services it is still to be explained. Increasing numbers
of user oriented functionalities for mobile health services are offered
by technology but little take up is documented within the institutional
practice of healthcare. Noteworthy legislative measures and investments
for eAccessibility and digital literacy do not yet bring Europe close to
meet the Riga Ministerial targets from 2006.
While empirical evidence should continue to be gathered, it is clear
that a paradigm shift is needed in the interpretative knowledge engines
supporting policy making. In other words, we need to apply a different
perspective on the evidence available and on what we make of it for
policy design. In particular, insights from behavioural studies and
social network analysis are needed to: a) understand why certain policy
measures are supported and other resisted by the target (policy
takers);b) study how social networks structure and flows can lead to
positive cascade effects for adoption of policy measures; c) extract
insights for new policies that focus on choices architecture to nudge
users into desired direction without infringing on individual free choice.
So, the key question in this issue is: what are the theoretical and
interpretative frameworks that can help us make better sense of the
evidence already collected and support new and innovative policy
approaches? The answer may be approaches that so far never or very
seldom have been applied to eGovernment, eHealth, and eInclusion.
Behavioural and social network studies have been mentioned only as an
example. Other alternative approaches can include System Dynamics and
other tools using empirical data to elaborate modelling simulation under
counter-factual assumptions ("what if?"). Papers can also propose yet
other alternative approaches. The thread is, however, to discuss
frameworks resting on two basic assumptions: a) policy resistance and
failure springs from the fact that ecosystem are way more complex than
the linear and reductionist assumptions upon which policy design tend to
rest; b) agents act using socially embedded and bounded rationality.
Regardless of the chosen approach, papers should not be merely
descriptive of data (in whatever form, statistics, survey results, in
depth case studies) but ideally would propose a new interpretative and
theoretical framework supported by illustrative and explanatory
empirical evidence. There is no need to test a hypothesis. Purely
theoretical or methodological papers are also welcome but they should
include a sustained analysis and argue for the validity of the proposed
framework through a systematic review of the relevant literature.
Additionally, we also welcome papers illustrating how new paradigms have
been successfully applied in other policy domain and showing how they
could be applied in eGovernment, eHealth, and eInclusion.
The issue editor is: Cristiano Codagnone
The deadline for article submission is: August 25, 2011. Please, send
your papers to (vassilia.orfanou /at/ eurodyn.com) with a copy to
(epractice /at/ eurodyn.com)
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