TY - GEN
T1 - Engaging citizens in digital public service innovation ecosystems-insights from the Netherlands and Italy
AU - Bharosa, Nitesh
AU - Marangio, Federica
AU - Petti, Claudio
AU - Janssen, Marijn
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Public agencies struggle with engaging citizens in digital public service innovation. The notion that citizen engagement in public service innovation can lead to more citizen-friendly digital services is widely accepted. Moreover, citizen engagement has also become an indicator of legitimacy; public service innovation without citizen engagement is more likely to be scrutinized on public values like privacy, transparency, fairness, and citizen control. Yet it remains difficult to engage with citizens throughout the various stages of innovation. Often, the hard question of how to balance system performance and public values in innovation resurfaces, and we cannot leave it to software programmers to answer this question. This short paper reveals how the Netherlands and Italy are engaging citizens in public service innovation. We found that in both countries, the quadruple helix approach is gaining support and citizen engagement is increasingly becoming the norm rather than the exception. Both countries are gaining experience with new citizen engagement methods like user-driven prototyping and living labs. We found that these methods increase empathy, creativity and reflection on ethical dilemmas. Following such methods also signals to policymakers that a democratic process was followed, ultimately backing a specific innovation direction. Other countries looking to enhance citizen engagement in public services innovation can benefit from the insights presented in this paper.
AB - Public agencies struggle with engaging citizens in digital public service innovation. The notion that citizen engagement in public service innovation can lead to more citizen-friendly digital services is widely accepted. Moreover, citizen engagement has also become an indicator of legitimacy; public service innovation without citizen engagement is more likely to be scrutinized on public values like privacy, transparency, fairness, and citizen control. Yet it remains difficult to engage with citizens throughout the various stages of innovation. Often, the hard question of how to balance system performance and public values in innovation resurfaces, and we cannot leave it to software programmers to answer this question. This short paper reveals how the Netherlands and Italy are engaging citizens in public service innovation. We found that in both countries, the quadruple helix approach is gaining support and citizen engagement is increasingly becoming the norm rather than the exception. Both countries are gaining experience with new citizen engagement methods like user-driven prototyping and living labs. We found that these methods increase empathy, creativity and reflection on ethical dilemmas. Following such methods also signals to policymakers that a democratic process was followed, ultimately backing a specific innovation direction. Other countries looking to enhance citizen engagement in public services innovation can benefit from the insights presented in this paper.
KW - digital public service innovation
KW - innovation ecosystems
KW - quadruple helix
KW - user driven prototyping
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85123013638&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3494193.3494269
DO - 10.1145/3494193.3494269
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85123013638
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
SP - 509
EP - 512
BT - Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance, ICEGOV 2021
A2 - Loukis, Euripidis
PB - ACM
T2 - 14th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance, ICEGOV 2021
Y2 - 6 October 2021 through 8 October 2021
ER -