Title
Open government and e-government: democratic challenges from a public value perspective
Abstract
We consider open government (OG) within the context of e-government and its broader implications for the future of public administration. We argue that the current US Administration's Open Government Initiative blurs traditional distinctions between e-democracy and e-government by incorporating historically democratic practices, now enabled by emerging technology, within administrative agencies. We consider how transparency, participation, and collaboration function as democratic practices in administrative agencies, suggesting that these processes are instrumental attributes of administrative action and decision making, rather than the objective of administrative action, as they appear to be currently treated. We propose alternatively that planning and assessing OG be addressed within a "public value" framework. The creation of public value is the goal of public organizations; through public value, public organizations meet the needs and wishes of the public with respect to substantive benefits as well as the intrinsic value of better government. We extend this view to OG by using the framework as a way to describe the value produced when interaction between government and citizens becomes more transparent, participative, and collaborative, i.e., more democratic.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.3233/IP-2012-0269
Proceedings of the 12th Annual International Digital Government Research Conference: Digital Government Innovation in Challenging Times
Keywords
DocType
Volume
open government,democratic challenge,public value perspective,collaboration,transparency,e government,democracy,social media
Conference
17
Issue
Citations 
PageRank 
2
36
2.09
References 
Authors
2
8
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Teresa M. Harrison122524.81
Santiago Guerrero2423.02
G. Brian Burke312111.12
Meghan Cook413615.22
Anthony Cresswell51006.32
Natalie Helbig616114.72
Jana Hrdinova7413.94
Theresa Pardo87210.53