The Journal of Community Informatics provides an opportunity for Community Informatics researchers and others to share their work with the larger community. Through the Journal's application of a rigorous process of peer review, knowledge and awareness concerning the community use of Information and Communications Technology is being brought to a wider professional audience.
In addition the Journal makes available key documents, "points of view", notes from the field and other materials that will be of wider interest within the community of those working in the area of Community Informatics.
Original funding for the Journal was provided by the Canadian Research Alliance for Community Innovation and Networking (CRACIN) a project funded by the Canadian Social Science and Humanities Research Council.
Statistics concerning the readership of individual articles may be found here and daily and monthly journal access statistics may be found here.
Editor-in-Chief
Michael Gurstein, Ph.D.
Centre for Community Informatics Research, Development and Training
Vancouver, CANADA
gurstein@gmail.com
Special Issue (Vol. 8 #2): Community Informatics and Open Government Data
Previous issues of the journal are still available.
About Community Informatics
Community Informatics (CI) is the study and the practice of enabling communities with Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs).
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To be a reviewer for The Journal of Community Informatics, send an e-mail to the editor indicating your qualifications and research interests or complete a reader registration profile and check the box at the bottom of the page.
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Announcements
Call for Papers (CfP): Call for Reviews |
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Vol 8, No 2 (2012): Special Issue: Community Informatics and Open Government 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.
Some open government data initiatives are being led by governments. Others 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 developing 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". Therefore, in this issue we seek to engage with the critical questions that are emerging from these paradigm shifts as well as the related policy initiatives, programmatic action and field experiences.
Table of Contents
Editorial
| The Promises and Perils of Open Government Data (OGD) | HTML |
| Tim G. Davies, Zainab Ashraf Bawa |
| Two Worlds of Open Government Data: Getting the Lowdown on Public Toilets in Chennai and Other Matters | HTML |
| Michael Gurstein |
Articles
| The Rhetoric of Transparency and its Reality: Transparent Territories, Opaque Power and Empowerment | HTML |
| Bhuvaneswari Raman |
| “This is what modern deregulation looks like” : co-optation and contestation in the shaping of the UK’s Open Government Data Initiative | HTML |
| Jo Bates |
| Data Template For District Economic Planning | HTML |
| Sharadini Rath |
| Guidelines for Designing Deliberative Digital Habitats: Learning from e-Participation for Open Data Initiatives | HTML |
| Fiorella De Cindio |
Notes from the field
| Mapping the Tso Kar basin in Ladakh | HTML |
| Shashank Srinivasan |
| Collecting data in Chennai City and the limits of openness | HTML |
| Nithya V Raman |
| Apps For Amsterdam | HTML |
| Tom Demeyer |
| Open Data - what the citizens really want | HTML |
| Wolfgang Both |
Points of View
| Some Observations on the Practice of “Open Data” As Opposed to Its Promise | HTML |
| Roland J. Cole |
Journal of Community Informatics. ISSN: 1712-4441
The Journal of Community Informatics






