Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good

This book is comprised of one study and three field evaluations of civic tech initiatives in developing countries. The study reviews evidence on the use of twenty-three information and communication technology (ICT) platforms designed to amplify ci...

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Main Authors: Peixoto, Tiago, Sifry, Micah L.
Format: Book
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank and Personal Democracy Press 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717091503398213001/Civic-tech-in-the-global-south-assessing-technology-for-the-public-good
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27947
id okr-10986-27947
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-279472021-05-25T10:54:42Z Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good Peixoto, Tiago Sifry, Micah L. Peixoto, Tiago Sifry, Micah L. ICT STRATEGY CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT GOVERNANCE PUBLIC UTILITIES PARTICIPATORY BUDGETING ONLINE VOTING This book is comprised of one study and three field evaluations of civic tech initiatives in developing countries. The study reviews evidence on the use of twenty-three information and communication technology (ICT) platforms designed to amplify citizen voices to improve service delivery. Focusing on empirical studies of initiatives in the global south, the authors highlight both citizen uptake (yelp) and the degree to which public service providers respond to expressions of citizen voice (teeth). The first evaluation looks at U-report in Uganda, a mobile platform that runs weekly large-scale polls with young Ugandans on a number of issues, ranging from safety to access to education to inflation to early marriage. The following evaluation takes a closer look at MajiVoice, an initiative that allows Kenyan citizens to report, through multiple channels, complaints with regard to water services. The third evaluation examines the case of Rio Grande do Sul’s participatory budgeting - the world’s largest participatory budgeting system - which allows citizens to participate either online or offline in defining the state’s yearly spending priorities. While the comparative study has a clear focus on the dimension of government responsiveness, the evaluations examine civic technology initiatives using five distinct dimensions, or lenses. The choice of these lenses is the result of an effort bringing together researchers and practitioners to develop an evaluation framework suitable to civic technology initiatives. 2017-08-22T16:15:10Z 2017-08-22T16:15:10Z 2017-08-21 Book http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717091503398213001/Civic-tech-in-the-global-south-assessing-technology-for-the-public-good 978-0-9964142-27 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27947 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank and Personal Democracy Press Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ICT STRATEGY
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC UTILITIES
PARTICIPATORY BUDGETING
ONLINE VOTING
spellingShingle ICT STRATEGY
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
GOVERNANCE
PUBLIC UTILITIES
PARTICIPATORY BUDGETING
ONLINE VOTING
Peixoto, Tiago
Sifry, Micah L.
Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
description This book is comprised of one study and three field evaluations of civic tech initiatives in developing countries. The study reviews evidence on the use of twenty-three information and communication technology (ICT) platforms designed to amplify citizen voices to improve service delivery. Focusing on empirical studies of initiatives in the global south, the authors highlight both citizen uptake (yelp) and the degree to which public service providers respond to expressions of citizen voice (teeth). The first evaluation looks at U-report in Uganda, a mobile platform that runs weekly large-scale polls with young Ugandans on a number of issues, ranging from safety to access to education to inflation to early marriage. The following evaluation takes a closer look at MajiVoice, an initiative that allows Kenyan citizens to report, through multiple channels, complaints with regard to water services. The third evaluation examines the case of Rio Grande do Sul’s participatory budgeting - the world’s largest participatory budgeting system - which allows citizens to participate either online or offline in defining the state’s yearly spending priorities. While the comparative study has a clear focus on the dimension of government responsiveness, the evaluations examine civic technology initiatives using five distinct dimensions, or lenses. The choice of these lenses is the result of an effort bringing together researchers and practitioners to develop an evaluation framework suitable to civic technology initiatives.
author2 Peixoto, Tiago
author_facet Peixoto, Tiago
Peixoto, Tiago
Sifry, Micah L.
format Book
author Peixoto, Tiago
Sifry, Micah L.
author_sort Peixoto, Tiago
title Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
title_short Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
title_full Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
title_fullStr Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
title_full_unstemmed Civic Tech in the Global South : Assessing Technology for the Public Good
title_sort civic tech in the global south : assessing technology for the public good
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank and Personal Democracy Press
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717091503398213001/Civic-tech-in-the-global-south-assessing-technology-for-the-public-good
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27947
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