While, the need of assessing public spaces, services and officers becomes, always more urgent and mandatory, a wide literature and extensive field experience show that internal audit by the public sector itself is not sufficient. There is the need to foster the civic accountability byintegrating an independent external evaluation in the audit process. The paper investigates the possibility that online communities provide a suitable framework for carrying on this external audit by supporting the so-called voice strategy in the contexts (such as the public sector) where the exit strategy does not hold. After envisaging the potential advantages coming from involving online communities of users in the assessment of a public space, service or officer, two early pilot experiments carried on to validate this assumption are presented and discussed. They are neither sufficient to validate the assumption nor sufficient to invalidate it, but provides hints helpful to pursue the investigation.

Are Online Communities Good for the Civic Audit of Public Spaces, Services, and Officers? / F. De Cindio, C. Peraboni - In: Online Communities and Social Computing : Third International Conference, OCSC 2009, Held as Part of HCI International 2009, San Diego, CA, USA, July 19-24, 2009 : Proceedings / [a cura di] A.A. Ozok, P. Zaphiris. - Berlin : Springer, 2009. - ISBN 9783642027734. - pp. 673-681 (( Intervento presentato al 3. convegno International Conference on Online Communities and Social Computing - OCSC 2009 tenutosi a San Diego, USA nel 2009 [10.1007/978-3-642-02774-1_72].

Are Online Communities Good for the Civic Audit of Public Spaces, Services, and Officers?

F. De Cindio
Primo
;
C. Peraboni
Ultimo
2009

Abstract

While, the need of assessing public spaces, services and officers becomes, always more urgent and mandatory, a wide literature and extensive field experience show that internal audit by the public sector itself is not sufficient. There is the need to foster the civic accountability byintegrating an independent external evaluation in the audit process. The paper investigates the possibility that online communities provide a suitable framework for carrying on this external audit by supporting the so-called voice strategy in the contexts (such as the public sector) where the exit strategy does not hold. After envisaging the potential advantages coming from involving online communities of users in the assessment of a public space, service or officer, two early pilot experiments carried on to validate this assumption are presented and discussed. They are neither sufficient to validate the assumption nor sufficient to invalidate it, but provides hints helpful to pursue the investigation.
Online Communities ; Civic Accountability ; Civic Audit ; e-participation
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
2009
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/67128
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