Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach

Open Development (OD) is a subset of ICT4D that studies the potential of IT-enabled openness to support social change among poor or marginalized populations. Early OD work examined the potential of IT-enabled openness to decentralize power and enable public engagement by disintermediating knowledge...

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Main Authors: Katherine M. A. Reilly, Juan P. Alperin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Saint Paul University 2016-06-01
Series:Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1601/v9i1_reilly%20and%20alperin.pdf
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spelling doaj-173876c7893240208a890e42007f7e672020-12-02T01:22:36ZengSaint Paul UniversityGlobal Media Journal: Canadian Edition1918-59011918-59012016-06-01915171Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship ApproachKatherine M. A. Reilly0Juan P. Alperin1Simon Fraser UniversitySimon Fraser UniversityOpen Development (OD) is a subset of ICT4D that studies the potential of IT-enabled openness to support social change among poor or marginalized populations. Early OD work examined the potential of IT-enabled openness to decentralize power and enable public engagement by disintermediating knowledge production and dissemination. However, in practice, intermediaries have emerged to facilitate open data and related knowledge production activities in development processes. We identify five models of intermediation in OD work: decentralized, arterial, ecosystem, bridging, and communities of practice and examine the implications of each for stewardship of open processes. We conclude that studying OD through these five forms of intermediation is a productive way of understanding whether and how different patterns of knowledge stewardship influence development outcomes. We also offer suggestions for future research that can improve our understanding of how to sustain openness, facilitate public engagement, and ensure that intermediation contributes to open development.http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1601/v9i1_reilly%20and%20alperin.pdfICT4DIntermediationMediationOpen DataOpen DevelopmentPublic EngagementStewardship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine M. A. Reilly
Juan P. Alperin
spellingShingle Katherine M. A. Reilly
Juan P. Alperin
Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
ICT4D
Intermediation
Mediation
Open Data
Open Development
Public Engagement
Stewardship
author_facet Katherine M. A. Reilly
Juan P. Alperin
author_sort Katherine M. A. Reilly
title Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
title_short Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
title_full Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
title_fullStr Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
title_full_unstemmed Intermediation in Open Development: A Knowledge Stewardship Approach
title_sort intermediation in open development: a knowledge stewardship approach
publisher Saint Paul University
series Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
issn 1918-5901
1918-5901
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Open Development (OD) is a subset of ICT4D that studies the potential of IT-enabled openness to support social change among poor or marginalized populations. Early OD work examined the potential of IT-enabled openness to decentralize power and enable public engagement by disintermediating knowledge production and dissemination. However, in practice, intermediaries have emerged to facilitate open data and related knowledge production activities in development processes. We identify five models of intermediation in OD work: decentralized, arterial, ecosystem, bridging, and communities of practice and examine the implications of each for stewardship of open processes. We conclude that studying OD through these five forms of intermediation is a productive way of understanding whether and how different patterns of knowledge stewardship influence development outcomes. We also offer suggestions for future research that can improve our understanding of how to sustain openness, facilitate public engagement, and ensure that intermediation contributes to open development.
topic ICT4D
Intermediation
Mediation
Open Data
Open Development
Public Engagement
Stewardship
url http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1601/v9i1_reilly%20and%20alperin.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT katherinemareilly intermediationinopendevelopmentaknowledgestewardshipapproach
AT juanpalperin intermediationinopendevelopmentaknowledgestewardshipapproach
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