Betreff: | Special Issue on Innovation through Open Data |
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Datum: | Fri, 22 Mar 2013 21:45:05 -0000 |
Von: | sender@ekimelu.com |
An: | neumann@wu.ac.at |
Special issue of the Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
Guest Editors: Marijn Janssen, J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, Natalie
Helbig, Anneke Zuiderwijk
The Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce
Research is planning a special issue on Innovation through Open
Data.
The opening of data has been hailed for its innovative capacity
and transformative power. Over the last years, many politicians,
companies, scientists, and citizen communities have paid
considerable attention to the demand of opening data of both
public and private organizations. An important event in this
context was the release of the EU Public Sector Information
(PSI) directive in 2003, in which a common legislative framework
was presented, which regulates making data of public sector
bodies
available for re-use1. In 2009, the Obama
Administration stated that its primary goal was the
establishment of an unprecedented level of openness of the
Government2 and published an Open Government
Directive some months afterwards3. Building on former
policies, the European Commission has recently presented an Open
Data Strategy for Europe, in which more evident rules on making
the best use of government-held information are presented4.
In 2012, the Obama Administration published the Digital
Government Strategy, which aims to 1) enable the American people
to access high-quality digital government information and
services anywhere, anytime, on any device; 2) seize the
opportunity to procure and manage devices, applications, and
data in smart, secure and affordable ways; and 3) unlock the
power of government data to spur innovation and improve the
quality of services for the American people5. In
addition to these policy documents, various studies have shown
that opening data by public and private organizations has
considerable potential to provide citizens, researchers,
companies and other stakeholders with many advantages, such as a
growing economy by stimulating innovation, developing new
businesses and obtaining new insights in the public and private
sector by creating new ways of understanding problems and
interpreting data. Open data enable new ventures to develop new
business models and innovative services. Often the added value
is generated from combining multiple sources.
Open data have the potential to enable different types of
innovation, such as innovation through the provision, processing
and use of open data, innovation through open data technologies,
and innovation through impact and public value creation from
open data initiatives (transparency, accountability and
collaborative governance approaches). Open data can contribute
to open government. However, although open data research is
performed increasingly, research about the way innovation can
take place through open data is still lacking. For this reason,
innovation through open data is the main focus of this Special
Issue.
Subject Coverage
We specifically encourage papers related to innovation with open
data. Particular topics to be addressed might include, but are
not limited to the following:
1. Open data provision and use
• Barriers, costs and benefits of open data provision and use;
• National and international challenges and opportunities for
open data;
• Requirements, principles and strategies for publishing and
using open data;
• Practice of open data; innovative ways of publishing and using
open data;
• Privacy and provenance issues; reliability and trustworthiness
of open data;
• Comparative studies; comparisons of open data initiatives;
• Case studies for domain/sector-specific open data strategies
(smart cities, environmental and geospatial research, social
media);
• Open data usability, user interaction and case studies with
lessons learned;
• Open innovation for public services;
• Legal, licensing and political issues: creative commons vs.
copyright, freedom of information, information sharing, data
visualization;
• Open data policies, strategies; policy guidelines and
frameworks;
• Benchmarks and metrics in open data usage.
2. Open data technologies
• Information systems and services for open data gathering and
provision;
• Technical frameworks and platforms of open data/access;
• Mashing platforms;
• Open data formats;
• Application Programming Interfaces (APIs);
• Metadata;
• Data linking;
• Semantic technologies;
• Open data infrastructures, open data platforms;
• Open access.
3. Impact of open data initiatives
• Public value and benefit creation and realization, such as
transparency, public participation and accountability);
• Open government, collaborative governance approaches involving
the use of open data; open participation;
• Open data and citizen participation in information gathering /
crowdsourcing; open data policy-making and co-creation;
• Business models, marketplaces and crowdsourcing platforms for
open data;
• Linking data, innovative services and applications;
• Evaluation of open data initiatives;
• Government transformation, process reengineering.
Notes for Intending Authors
We are seeking original manuscripts on conceptual and
methodological issues related to research on innovation through
open data, as well as papers which report on the results of
empirical research in the field. Papers can focus on particular
open data initiatives or a particular type or category of open
data, as well as more general outcomes. Both qualitative and
quantitative research can be submitted. Submitted papers should
not have been previously published nor be currently under
consideration for publication elsewhere.
Author guidelines can be found at
http://www.jtaer.com/author_guidelines.doc. All submissions will
be refereed by at least three reviewers. Submissions should be
directed by email to jtaer.open.data@utalca.cl.
For more information, please visit the following web site:
http://www.jtaer.com.
Important dates
Full paper submission: 1 August 2013
Notification of acceptance: 1 October 2013
Revised submission: 1 November 2013
Final acceptance notification: 15 November 2013
Camera ready version of paper: 15 December 2013
Publication: April 2014
Guest Editors
Prof. Dr. Marijn Janssen
Professor in ICT & Governance
Delft University of Technology
Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management
The Netherlands
Assoc. Prof. Dr. J. Ramon Gil-Garcia
Associate Professor in Public Administration
Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas (CIDE)
Mexico
Dr. Natalie Helbig
Senior Program Associate
Center for Technology in Government / SUNY Albany
USA
Anneke Zuiderwijk
Visiting Researcher at Research and Documentation Centre
Dutch Ministry of Security and Justice
The Netherlands
1http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2003:345:0090:0096:EN:PDF
2http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/TransparencyandOpenGovernment
3http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-06.pdf
4http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-06.pdf
5http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/egov/digital-government/digital-government.html