In this Book

  • Traversing Digital Babel: Information, E-Government, and Exchange
  • Book
  • Alon Peled
  • 2014
  • Published by: The MIT Press
summary
The computer systems of government agencies are notoriously complex. New technologies are piled on older technologies, creating layers that call to mind an archaeological dig. Obsolete programming languages and closed mainframe designs offer barriers to integration with other agency systems. Worldwide, these unwieldy systems waste billions of dollars, keep citizens from receiving services, and even -- as seen in interoperability failures on 9/11 and during Hurricane Katrina -- cost lives. In this book, Alon Peled offers a groundbreaking approach for enabling information sharing among public sector agencies: using selective incentives to "nudge" agencies to exchange information assets. Peled proposes the establishment of a Public Sector Information Exchange (PSIE), through which agencies would trade information. After describing public sector information sharing failures and the advantages of incentivized sharing, Peled examines the U.S. Open Data program, and the gap between its rhetoric and results. He offers examples of creative public sector information sharing in the United States, Australia, Brazil, the Netherlands, and Iceland. Peled argues that information is a contested commodity, and draws lessons from the trade histories of other contested commodities -- including cadavers for anatomical dissection in nineteenth-century Britain. He explains how agencies can exchange information as a contested commodity through a PSIE program tailored to an individual country's needs, and he describes the legal, economic, and technical foundations of such a program. Touching on issues from data ownership to freedom of information, Peled offers pragmatic advice to politicians, bureaucrats, technologists, and citizens for revitalizing critical information flows.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright Page
  2. pp. i-vi
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. ix-x
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  1. Series Editor’s Introduction
  2. Sandra Braman
  3. pp. 12-13
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  1. Introduction: The Archaeological and Electronic Mountains
  2. pp. 1-12
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  1. 1 The Information Sharing Crisis that Does Not Go Away
  2. pp. 13-38
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  1. 2 Coerce, Consent, and Coax: Existing Information Sharing Approaches
  2. pp. 39-56
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  1. 3 Why Open Data Finds Agencies’ Doors Closed
  2. pp. 57-74
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  1. 4 How Data Trade Opens Agencies’ Closed Doors
  2. pp. 75-104
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  1. 5 Public Sector Data as a Contested Commodity
  2. pp. 105-124
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  1. 6 The Public Sector Information Exchange (PSIE)
  2. pp. 125-160
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  1. 7 Four PSIE Challenges
  2. pp. 161-178
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  1. 8 A Political Strategy to Promote PSIE
  2. pp. 179-192
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  1. Appendix: Abbreviations
  2. pp. 193-198
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 199-200
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  1. References
  2. pp. 201-248
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 249-279
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