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[ecrea] Journal of Community Informatics: Call for Papers for Special issue on Open Data
Thu Mar 10 10:55:21 GMT 2011
*Journal of Community Informatics: Call for Papers for Special issue on
Open Data *
- Deadline for abstracts: 31st March 2011
***Call for Proposals***
The Journal of Community Informatics (http://ci-journal.net) is a focal
point for the communication of research that is of interest to a global
network of academics, Community Informatics practitioners and national
and multi-lateral policy makers.
We invite submission of original, unpublished articles for a forthcoming
special edition of the Journal that will focus on Open Data. We welcome
research articles, case studies and notes from the field. All research
articles will be double blind peer-reviewed. Insights and analytical
perspectives from practitioners and policy makers in the form of notes
from the field or case studies are also encouraged. These will not be
peer-reviewed.
***Why a special issue on Open Data***
In many countries across the world, discussions, policies and
developments are actively emerging around open access to government
data. It is believed that opening up government data to citizens is
critical for enforcing transparency and accountability within the
government. Open data is also seen as holding the potential to bring
about greater citizens, participation, empowering citizens to ask
questions of their governments via not only the data that is made openly
available but also through the interpretations that different
stakeholders make of the open data. Besides advocacy for open data on
grounds of democracy, it is also argued that opening government data can
have significant economic potential, generating new industries and
innovations.
Whilst some open government data initiatives are being led by
governments, other open data projects are taking a grassroots approach,
collecting and curating government data in reusable digital formats
which can be used by specific communities at the grassroots and/or macro
datasets that can be used/received/applied in different ways in
different local/grassroots contexts. INGOs, NGOs and various civil
society and community based organizations are also getting involved with
open data activities, from sharing data they hold regarding aid flows,
health, education, crime, land records, demographics, etc, to actively
sourcing public data through freedom of information and right to
information acts. The publishing of open data on the Internet can make
it part of a global eco-system of data, and efforts
are underway in technology, advocacy and policy-making communities to
develop standards, approaches and tools for linking and analysing these
new open data resources. At the same time, there are questions
surrounding the very notion of "openness" , primarily whether openness
and open data have negative repercussions for particular groups of
citizens in certain social, geographic, political, demographic, cultural
and other grassroots contexts.
In sum then, what we find in society today is not only various practices
relating to open data, but also an active shift in paradigms about
access and use of information and data, and notions of ?openness? and
?information/data?. These emerging/renewed paradigms are also
configuring/reconfiguring understandings and practices of community and
citizenship. We therefore find it imperative to engage with crucial
questions that are emerging from these paradigm shifts as well as the
related policy initiatives, programmatic action and field experiences.
***Some of the questions that we hope this special issue will explore
are:***
1) How are citizens? groups, grassroots organizations, NGOs, diverse
civil society associations and other public and private entities
negotiating with different arms of the state to provide access to
government data both in the presence and absence of official open data
policies, freedom/right of information legislations and similar
commitments on the part of governments?
2) What are the various models of open data that are operational in
practice in different parts of the world? What are the different ways in
which open data are being used by and for the grassroots and what are
the impacts (positive, negative, paradoxical) of such open data for
communities and groups at the grassroots?
3) Who/which actors are involved in opening up what kinds of data? What
are their stakes in opening up such data and making it available for the
public?
4) What are the different technologies that are being used for
publishing, storing and archiving open data? What are the
challenges/issues that various grassroots users and the stakeholders,
experience with respect to these technologies i.e., design, scale,
costs, dissemination of the open data to different publics and realizing
the potential of open data?
5) What notions of openness and publicness are at work in both policies
as well as initiatives concerning open data and what impacts do these
notions have on grassroots? practitioners and users?
6) Following from the above, what are the implications of opening up
different kinds of data for privacy, security and local level practices
and information systems?
***Thematic focus***
The following suggested areas of thematic focus (policy, technology,
uses, impacts) give a non-exhaustive list of potential topic areas for
articles or case studies. The core interest of the special issue is
addressing each of these themes from, or taking into account,
grassroots, local citizen and community perspectives.
A) Different policy and practice approaches to open data and open
government data
B) Diverse uses of open data and their impacts
C) Technologies that are deployed for implementing open data and their
implications
D) Critical assessments of stakeholders and stakes in opening up
different kinds of data.
***Submission***
Abstracts are invited in the first instance, to be submitted by e-mail to
(jociopendata /at/ gmail.com).
- Deadline for abstracts: 31st March 2011
- Deadline for complete paper submissions: 15th September 2011
- Publication date is forthcoming
Please send abstracts, in the first instance, of up to 300 words to
(jociopendata /at/ gmail.com).
For information about JCI submission requirements, including author
guidelines, please visit:
http://www.ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions
***Guest Editors***
Zainab Bawa -Centre for Internet and Society (CIS) RAW fellow
(bawazainab79 /at/ gmail.com)
Tim Davies - Director, Practical Participation
http://www.practicalparticipation.co.uk/odi/
(tim /at/ practicalparticipation.co.uk) | @timdavies | +447834856303
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