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Government 2.0 Explained
1. Government 2.0: Utilization Model,
Implementation Scenarios, &
Relationships
Authors
Gohar Feroz Khan (Korea University of Technology & Education, South Korea)
Bobby Swar (SolBridge International School of Business, South Korea)
Pre-ECIS workshop: E-Government 2.0: Case studies and experience reports
June 4, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
2. Table of Contents
What is social media?
Social media defined
Social media-based government
Government 2.0 vs. e-govt.
How is Social Media Used in Public Sector?
Method
Results
The big picture
Govt. 2.0 Utilization model
Govt. 2.0 implementation scenarios
Govt. 2.0 Relationships
Conclusion
3. What is Social Media?
Social media consists of a variety of tools and
technologies that includes:
Collaborative projects (e.g., Wikipedia and wikispaces),
Blogs (e.g., WordPress) and microblogs (e.g., Twitter),
Content communities (e.g., YouTube),
Social networking sites (e.g., Facebook),
Virtual game worlds (e.g., World of Warcraft),
Virtual social worlds (e.g., Second Life), and
All other Web 2.0 platforms that facilitate the creation &
exchange of UGC.
4. Social Media Defined
“A Web 2.0 based technologies/tools— that allows the
creation and exchange of user-generated contents while
letting users establish one or more of these:
Identity
Conversations
Connectivity (i.e., presence)
Relationships
Reputation
Groups, and
Share contents.” (Khan, 2013, p.2)
5. What is Government 2.0?
Is driven by social media/Web 2.0
Also known as:
Collaborative Government (McGuire, 2006),
Do-it-yourself Government (Dunleavy & Margetts,
2010),
Government as a Platform (O'Reilly, 2010),
Social Government (Khan, et al., 2012), or
We-Government (Linders, 2012), among others.
6. Government 2.0 VS., E-Government
Table 1 e-Government VS., Government 2.0
e-Government Government 2.0
Technology Static enterprise and
domain specific
technologies;
Web 1.0 phenomenon;
Consumer and commoditised
technologies;
Web 2.0 & Social Media;
Strategy Inside-Out Outside-In
Service Focus Citizens as Receivers Citizens as Active Participants
8. How is Social Media Used in
Public Sector?
Method (Inductive Approach)
A Web survey of 200 govt. websites from 40 countries (20
Developed and 20 Developing), to look for:
1) SNS
2) multimedia sharing services
3) discussion forums ,
4) blogging ,
5) wikis ,
6) rich site summery , and
7) social tagging services,
Coded either as “yes” or “no”.
9. How is Social Media Used in
Public Sector?
Method (Inductive Approach)
Also, reviewed 45 Web 2.0 initiatives from around the
world.
Each initiative was assessed based on a coding
scheme covering four dimensions:
1) citizens’ engagement,
2) mass collaboration,
3) social transaction, and
4) Web 2.0 complexity
The variables were coded as: 1) low, 2) medium,
and 3) high to access the four dimensions
10. Results
The Big Picture: Social Media in Public
Sector
Govt. 2.0 Utilization Model
Govt. 2.0 Implementation Scenarios
Govt. 2.0 Relationships
11. The Big Picture: Social Media
in Public Sector
This is what we found it is
Posts, Likes, Tweets, & SharesPosts, Likes, Tweets, & Shares
Mass collaborations, citizen sourcing,
co-creation, etc.
Mass collaborations, citizen sourcing,
co-creation, etc.
Social transactionSocial transaction
-SM use is mostly informational and limitedly collaboration and transactional.
12. Social Media in Public Sector
This is what it should be
Posts, Likes, Tweets, & SharesPosts, Likes, Tweets, & Shares
Mass collaborations, citizen sourcing,
co-creation, etc.
Mass collaborations, citizen sourcing,
co-creation, etc.
Social transactionSocial transaction
13. The Big Picture
The social media pipe (i.e., social
media tools/technologies) connects
producer and consumer or
prosumers (i.e., government
agencies, citizens, and
businesses) where the government
services are co-produced that
flows in both directions making
government and citizen partners in
the delivery of public services.
Figure 1. Conceptual Model of Social Media Use in Public Sector
15. 1. Information Socialization (IS)
At this stage, public sector leverage social
media as an informational and participatory
channel to increase citizen’s awareness and
enable them to monitor and participate in
government activities.
16. Socialization of information
is achieved in two ways:
Simple Information Socialization, and
Complex Information Socialization
17. Simple Information
Socialization
Simple information socialization is
achieved through merely incorporating
social media tools in the existing
government websites e.g.,
through incorporating comments
and discussions features, and/or
through establishing dedicated
social media pages/accounts (e.g.,
Facebook fan page or Twitter
account) to delivery day-to-day
information/news to the citizens.
18. Complex Information
Socialization
Complex information socialization
requires establishing advance
social media/web 2.0 based
informational government portals
for informational and participatory
purposes, such as:
http://maplight.org/
http://www.data.gov/about, and
http://blogs.justice.gov/main/.
19. Note
An important use of the socialization of information
is in situation where the immediate delivery of
information/news is crucial, such as:
disseminating news and information about public safety
and in crisis management situations such as,
weather,
traffic,
diseases, and
nature or man-made disasters.
20. 2. Mass Collaboration
At this stage, public sector leverage
social media tools to poster mass social
collaboration between government and
citizens and cross agency collaboration.
Mass collaboration was instrumental in
regulation, crowd sourcing, and law
enforcement.
Mostly observed in Developed
countries
21. Example 1-Regulation
For example, the Peer-To-
Patent (www.peertopatent.com)
initiative by the Patent and
Trademark Office (USPTO) of
the United States is a good
example of mass government
and citizen social collaboration
in reinforcing regulations.
22. Example 2-Law Enforcement
Another example is the Korean
government’s smart phone apps
developed to enable mass collaboration in
reporting illegal car parking, waste
disposal, energy misuse, and reporting
other inappropriate behaviour.
23. Example 3-Croud Sourcing
Similarly, a good example
of croudsourcing is the
“apps for democracy”
initiative:
http://www.appsfordemoc
racy.org/application-
directory/.
A U.S. government
initiative to engage the
public in developing new
applications for
democracy.
24. 3. Social Transaction
Public sector use (limitedly though) social
media tools to establish tangible online
transactions with the citizens.
25. Example 1
Another example of using
social media for service
delivery is the “Fixmystreet”
initiative:
http://www.fixmystreet.com/)
Where citizens using an
interactive portal report a
problem related to their locality
(e.g., fly tipping, broken paving
slabs, or street lighting) which
is then forwarded to the council
to fix the problem.
26. Example 2
For example, the U.K.
government use a Web
2.0 based website
(www.gov.uk) to provide
simple, one-stop access
to government services
online where citizens
can access to public
services such as:
tax, driving test, passport,
births, deaths, marriages,
and health care.
27. Example-3
The Korea NTS is
operating online
"Year-end Tax
Settlement Service“
at:
www.yesone.go.kr
to enable taxpayers
to gather all sorts of
the receipts for
income deduction
online.
29. Standalone Govt. 2.0
In the standalone implementation scenarios,
informational Government 2.0 (i.e., stage 1)
can be implement directly under traditional
government settings (i.e., paper based
government).
Mostly, observed in developing countries (e.g.,
Zimbabwe, Rwanda, and Fiji) where e-
Government is not yet fully implemented
30. Paper-Based
Web 2.0 & Social
Media Based
Standalone Govt. 2.0
Figure 3: standalone Government 2.0
31. Nested Govt. 2.0
Under this scenario, governments
funnel existing e-Government
infrastructure and capabilities to
leverage social media tools in the day-
to-day governance.
Scenario 2 is the most likely scenario
where Government 2.0 is realized under
the umbrella of e-government
32. Paper-Based
Static ICTs & Web
1.0 Based
Web 2.0 & Social
Media Based
Nested Govt. 2.0
Figure 2: Nested Government 2.0
33. Nested Govt. 2.0
Observed in the developing and transitional
economies, such as:
Estonia
India
Pakistan
Kazakhstan
Lithuania
Poland
South Africa, and
Thailand
34. Hybrid govt. 2.0
Hybrid Government 2.0, from a conceptual point
of view, can be defined as,
a flavor (or subset) of ICT based government
(e.g., e-Government & m-Government) that
harness social media tool/technologies to
establish an open, transparent, and
participative government (see Figure 4).
36. Hybrid govt. 2.0
This type of government is observed in
advanced economies, such as:
Denmark
New Zealand
South Korea
the Netherlands
the United Kingdom, and
the United States
who have already made significant
achievement in the e-Government
37. Govt. 2.0 Relationships
C2G Informational Relationship
e.g., inform of feedback and exert opinion, or reporting
crimes and natural disasters using social media tools.
C2G Service Relationship
the “Apps for America 2”: A U.S. government
initiative where citizens are invited to developed
apps for the government
Other possible relationships
B2G informational relationship
B2G service relationship
38. Conclusion
Social media in public sector is more than just “likes”,
“tweets”, and “shares”
Social media tools and channels useful to
disseminate information, foster mass collaboration,
enforce laws, and execute regulation.
SM use is mostly informational and limited
transactional.
SM has great potential for DCs
39. Conclusion
Limitations
we only focused on the use of and opportunities
related to social media
studies are needed to access the risk and
reward of social media in public sector
systematically
Stages based risks
Skills and capabilities needed to implement social
media are not discussed
40. Thank You
In case you are interested
SSCR special issue on
Best Practices in Social Media at Non-
profit, Public, Education, and Healthcare
Organizations
CFP:
http://laton.wikispaces.com/SSCOR+Speci
al+Issue+on+Social+Media
41. References
Eggers, W. D. (2005). Government 2.0: Using Technology to Improve Education, Cut Red Tape, Reduce
Gridlock, and Enhance Democracy. Lanhma, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
McGuire, M. (2006). Collaborative public management: Assessing what we know and how we know it.
Public Administration Review, 66, 33-43.
Dunleavy, P., & Margetts, H. Z. (2010). The second wave of digital era governance. APSA 2010 Annual
Meeting Papers.
Khan, G. F., Yoon, H. Y., & Park, H. W. (2012). Social Media Use in Public Sector: A
comparitive study of the Korean & US Government Paper presented at the ATHS panel
during the 8th International Conference on Webometrics, Informatics and Scientometrics &
13th COLLNET Meeting, 23-26 October 2012, Seoul, Korea.
O'Reilly, T. (2010). Government as a Platform (Chap 2). In D. Lathrop & L. Ruma (Eds.), Open
government: Collaboration, transparency, and participation in practice: O'Reilly Media.
Linders, D. (2012). From e-government to we-government: Defining a typology for citizen
coproduction in the age of social media. Government Information Quarterly, 29(4), 446-454.
doi: 10.1016/j.giq.2012.06.003
Patrice, M. (2010). Building open government. Government Information Quarterly, 27(4),
401-413. doi: 10.1016/j.giq.2010.07.002
43. Is the Social Media and
SNS same things?
No
All SNS (social networking site) are
social media, but not all social media
are SNS.
Or
All SNS are based on Web 2.0, but not
all Web 2.0 concepts are SNS
44. Example
Based on Social Media/Web
2.0
Based on Social Media/Web
2.0
Facebook is an SNS (i.e., facilitate
online social networking)
Wikipedia is not an SNS (i.e., does
not facilitate online social
networking)
An application/example of social
media/web 2.0 to facilitate online
social networking
An example/application of social
media/web 2.0 to facilitate online
collaborative content creation
VS.
,