From: Steven Clift <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Jan 23, 2015 at 7:19 AM
Subject: Sunlight: Help us build an evidence base on the social impact of
open data!
To: [email protected]


[image: open data in Scrabble letters]Photo by Flickr user Justin Grimes
<http://ift.tt/18HHXD2>

Talking about the economic benefit of open data is one good way to describe
open data’s impact, and provides a "great rationale <http://ift.tt/UOOcSv>" for
the release of relevant data sets. However, open data’s impact does not lie
solely in the economic sphere. Government openness may produce tremendous
other benefits for our societies: increasing state or institutional
responsiveness, reducing levels of corruption and clientelism, building new
democratic spaces for citizens, empowering local and disadvantaged voices,
or enhancing service delivery and effective service utilization.

But how effective open data and government transparency actually are at
producing these social benefits is not yet at all evident. At a time when "fake
government openness <http://ift.tt/1rzJ51i>" and "open-washing
<http://ift.tt/1dIyFtX>" are increasingly seen as a risk to the
transparency movement’s credibility, there is burning need for more
evidence on how opening up government information helps us all use
resources more “effectively, equitably and sustainably to meet people’s
needs <http://ift.tt/1CssYwf>.” Developing indexes and comparative studies
on a wide range of topics (e.g. budgets <http://ift.tt/XrxVSR>, the freedom
of the web <http://ift.tt/1Cst07i>, aid <http://ift.tt/1dJz3rr>, perceived
corruption <http://ift.tt/OZZdLa>, etc.) is a crucial first step, but in
order to get more buy-in from our policy-makers and a critical mass of
citizens, we need to look beyond those indexes and find other ways to
analyze the effect of open data on societies.

Much of the existing literature seeking to measure the impact and
effectiveness of transparency and open data accountability initiatives seem
to face <http://ift.tt/1y7FiM1> a common challenge: It is incredibly
difficult to come up with definitive, evidence-based generalizations about
how "x" type of initiatives produce "y" kinds of effects. The field has yet
to coalesce around a theory of change, for one, and there are significant
methodological challenges around comparability and unevenness of evidence.

At Sunlight, we would like to help change that. As a continuation of our
work <http://ift.tt/1y7FkUb> to provide examples of how opening up
information makes a difference in communities across the U.S., we want to
tackle some of these challenges through a new research project to explore
and analyze the social impact of open data outside the U.S. Our goal is to
build a strong evidence base that might empower further generalizations and
to develop a few potential theories of change that capture the nuances,
complexity and messiness of this broad agenda. With generous support from
the Open Data for Development <http://ift.tt/1y7FiM3> Research Fund of the
OGP Open Data Working Group, our research aims to identify the factors that
increase the likelihood that open data initiatives will achieve their
stated goals in a particular context. We also seek to understand why and
how these factors lead to success or failure.

As a first step, we are asking you — the community of transparency and open
government advocates, civic hackers, investigative journalists and policy
makers — to provide us with illustrative examples of how open data and
transparency projects are having impact on our societies.

Are you working on an open data project that improves the level of
political participation and citizen engagement? Do you know any tech-based
transparency project that you think might lead to change in social
behavior? Is your transparency initiative aimed at decreasing the
perception of corruption, fraud or waste. Has it led to more investigations
or better investigative journalism? Are you aware of an open data
initiative that improves public service delivery or social policies? From
environmental through educational and public safety to health outcomes,
we're looking for examples — both on the local and national level — that
look beyond the direct economic benefits of open data and illustrate how
government openness produces social benefits.

We realize that the definitions we use here are a bit broad, but our goal
is to encourage everyone working in this field to help us build a strong
evidence base that we can further filter and analyze. So please help us and
submit your case story through this link <http://ift.tt/1Cst0nT>, or send
it to [email protected] before the end of Feb. 4! All
you need to do is give a very short description of your project and how you
think it's making a change in our societies. Any supporting documents
(theories of change, articles, impact stories) in both your local language
or in English are welcome too.

Access to government information and decision-making processes is a
fundamental democratic principle. Open data and digital transparency are
one important way of achieving that access. Help us make our case even
stronger!


from Sunlight Foundation Blog http://ift.tt/1y7Fj2i
via IFTTT <http://ift.tt/1bODNcb>

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