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Sharing government-owned data with the public: a cross-country analysis of open data practice in the Middle East

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 12:43 authored by Jazem AlAnazi, Akemi Chatfield
Since 2009, open government policies, open data, and social media use in government have been actively promoted by democratic governments around the world to promote the goals of government transparency, citizen engagement, and collaboration. To date, however, there is a lack of empirical research into open government practice. This knowledge gap has managerial and public policy implications for democratic governments and, importantly, for the governments in the Middle East in which explosive growth has occurred in the number of users of the Internet and social media. This research attempts to reduce this gap by examining the maturity level in open data implementation across the governments in the Middle East. In this research the maturity level was measured using the eight principles for open government data implementation practice proposed by the 2007 Open Data Working Group. The key findings from website survey analysis on open data practices and plausible reasons are discussed.

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Citation

AlAnazi, J. M. & Chatfield, A. T. (2012). Sharing government-owned data with the public: a cross-country analysis of open data practice in the Middle East. 18th Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS) 2012 Proceedings (pp. 1-10). AIS eLibrary.

Parent title

Americas Conference on Information Systems

Pagination

1-10

Language

English

RIS ID

72937

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