Unfortunately, I think it is mostly been the latter.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32128642/ns/politics-cq_politics/ Glen Newton http://zzzoot.blogspot.com/ -- - |
Yes! Many people confuse transparency and access to publicly funded
data, primarily because they understand that open government data are simply those associated with the schedules of leaders, how leaders spend money, how money is spent on programs or how leaders vote, etc. The political process of government. These are all excellent pursuits, and should be pursued in the name accuntability, evaluation, transparency which are part of the democratic decision making apparatus. But that is not the only form of government decision making. Open data from science, research, geomatics, NGOs and community developers is something quite different. Open data for them means the non private aggregated data at various scales such as the census, health data, environmental data, location/place based data to enable citizen science, participatory democracy or collaborative evidenced based decision making. Another huge part of governing and the democratic process. This leads to citizen, NGO, business, academic led research on topics such as population health, political economy, business analysis, crime analysis etc. It can also mean the location of brown fields, oil wells, mine sites etc. to do environmental and corporate responsibility analysis that can be combined with census and transparency spending analysis such as corporate welfare schemes or parallel environmental impact assessments etc. Publicly funded research data be they biological, physics, geological, oceanographic, drug testing, or health research results, to enable citizens and NGO led epidemiological studies, fish counts, water quality reporting, climate modeling, indexes of well being, community mapping and so on. This is a different kind of data access issue, not unrelated to transparency but requiring a very different lens on the data part of open data. So, we would be better off being specific with what we want - access to transparency data implies FOI requests, Stimulus Watch, Visible Government, How'd they Vote, CivicAccess, or spending on research while access to publicly funded data, implies Data Liberation Initiative, CivicAccess, Municipal Data Liberation Initiative, Research Data Canada, Geogratis, Geobase, etc. Open data in essence does mean both, however, like all things the devil is in the detail and how people interpret the terms and their assumptions. Also, these two communities of access/open data advocates do not necessarily overlap. And of course within these there are many differences. In some cases open data also means open publishing, open source, particularly in the sciences. Access to publicly funded data and research data would include transparency data while the transparency data advocates often forget that government and corporate decision making is also conducted with research & public data from both social and natural sciences. It would be great to see these worlds collaborate, bridge and overlap a bit more. Newton<[hidden email]> wrote: > Unfortunately, I think it is mostly been the latter. > http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32128642/ns/politics-cq_politics/ > > Glen Newton > http://zzzoot.blogspot.com/ > > -- > > - > _______________________________________________ > CivicAccess-discuss mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.pwd.ca/mailman/listinfo/civicaccess-discuss > -- Tracey P. Lauriault 613-234-2805 https://gcrc.carleton.ca/confluence/display/GCRCWEB/Lauriault |
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