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Participatory governance in the digital age: from input to oversight

Participatory governance in the digital age: from input to oversight
Participatory governance in the digital age: from input to oversight
Digital technologies are now an integral part of citizen-state encounters. This article surveys the interaction of four such technologies with four modes of public participation: knowledge transfer, collective decision making and action, choice and voice, and judgment and oversight. It enquires how different modes of participation are shaping the adoption of digital technologies and how digital technologies can amplify, challenge, or reshape modes of participation. The comparative approach enables a nuanced account of the ambivalent mixture of potentials and risks that sensing technology, data analytics, governance platforms, and social media represent for each participation mode. It also guards against a determinist mindset that overstates the transformative effect of technology, instead arguing that digitalization is less likely to create something radically new than recalibrate the composition of participatory activity, shifting emphasis from inputting expertise and preferences before a decision to oversight and judgment of decisions and implementation.
citizen participation, digital technology, participatory governance
1932-8036
3562-3581
Dean, Rikki
a830dbdb-7c38-41d3-9d18-02c335d645cb
Dean, Rikki
a830dbdb-7c38-41d3-9d18-02c335d645cb

Dean, Rikki (2023) Participatory governance in the digital age: from input to oversight. International Journal of Communication, 17, 3562-3581.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Digital technologies are now an integral part of citizen-state encounters. This article surveys the interaction of four such technologies with four modes of public participation: knowledge transfer, collective decision making and action, choice and voice, and judgment and oversight. It enquires how different modes of participation are shaping the adoption of digital technologies and how digital technologies can amplify, challenge, or reshape modes of participation. The comparative approach enables a nuanced account of the ambivalent mixture of potentials and risks that sensing technology, data analytics, governance platforms, and social media represent for each participation mode. It also guards against a determinist mindset that overstates the transformative effect of technology, instead arguing that digitalization is less likely to create something radically new than recalibrate the composition of participatory activity, shifting emphasis from inputting expertise and preferences before a decision to oversight and judgment of decisions and implementation.

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More information

Published date: 2023
Keywords: citizen participation, digital technology, participatory governance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504706
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504706
ISSN: 1932-8036
PURE UUID: ab1a8139-4d01-4a82-aea1-f829712ca79a
ORCID for Rikki Dean: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5381-4532

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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:35
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:15

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Contributors

Author: Rikki Dean ORCID iD

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