Does social media transform city government? A case study of three ASEAN cities: Bandung, Indonesia, Iligan, Philippines and Pukhet, Thailand

Purpose This research aims to investigate the impact of the use of social media on the organizational form and function in selected local governments of Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. Design/methodology/approach This research used quantitative and qualitative methods. The researchers not o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transforming government 2017-01, Vol.11 (3), p.343-376
Hauptverfasser: Roengtam, Sataporn, Nurmandi, Achmad, Almarez, David N., Kholid, Anwar
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container_end_page 376
container_issue 3
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container_title Transforming government
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creator Roengtam, Sataporn
Nurmandi, Achmad
Almarez, David N.
Kholid, Anwar
description Purpose This research aims to investigate the impact of the use of social media on the organizational form and function in selected local governments of Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. Design/methodology/approach This research used quantitative and qualitative methods. The researchers not only conducted comparative- explanatory studies among the three ASEAN cities but also used multiple-informant and secondary data analyses. All variables are operationalized into indicators and transformed into a questionnaire in three languages: English, Indonesian and Thai. Primary data for the research were collected using a cross-sectional survey conducted in Bandung City, Indonesia; Iligan City, the Philippines; and Pukhet City, Thailand. Findings This research found that social media use has not yet affected the internal organizational processes in the three cities. Also, social media use is not appropriated as a space for citizen-government interaction. It is used for only information dissemination to the public; social media seems to have been used for only collecting information from citizens but not for involving them in the decision-making process. Research limitations/implications This research covers only three cities in the ASEAN countries, and the findings cannot be generalized to others. Moreover, this research looks at the supply-side dimension or government organization side only. However, the findings confirm that findings of previous research studies that social media use in the local government is only for information dissemination. Practical implications Legal bases for social media use could be an urgent matter to address to advance more fundamental changes in government processes. Originality/value There is no prior comparative study on the use of social media by local governments in the ASEAN countries. Social media owing to its sense of personalization or sense of community improves communication between citizens and government better than e-government sites; however, as articulated by Mirchandaniet al. (2008), social media may hinder rather than facilitate the delivery of services ( Mirchandaniet al. , 2008 ). This is due to the absence of a legal basis of its use, as well as agreements on the manner of its use, which prevents full integration of social media into the governance process, particularly in the cases of the cities of Iligan, the Philippines, and Phuket, Thailand.
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All variables are operationalized into indicators and transformed into a questionnaire in three languages: English, Indonesian and Thai. Primary data for the research were collected using a cross-sectional survey conducted in Bandung City, Indonesia; Iligan City, the Philippines; and Pukhet City, Thailand. Findings This research found that social media use has not yet affected the internal organizational processes in the three cities. Also, social media use is not appropriated as a space for citizen-government interaction. It is used for only information dissemination to the public; social media seems to have been used for only collecting information from citizens but not for involving them in the decision-making process. Research limitations/implications This research covers only three cities in the ASEAN countries, and the findings cannot be generalized to others. Moreover, this research looks at the supply-side dimension or government organization side only. However, the findings confirm that findings of previous research studies that social media use in the local government is only for information dissemination. Practical implications Legal bases for social media use could be an urgent matter to address to advance more fundamental changes in government processes. Originality/value There is no prior comparative study on the use of social media by local governments in the ASEAN countries. Social media owing to its sense of personalization or sense of community improves communication between citizens and government better than e-government sites; however, as articulated by Mirchandaniet al. (2008), social media may hinder rather than facilitate the delivery of services ( Mirchandaniet al. , 2008 ). 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source Emerald Journals; Standard: Emerald eJournal Premier Collection; PAIS Index
subjects Case studies
Cities
Citizen participation
Communication
Comparative studies
Cooperation
County executives
Decision making
Electronic government
Governance
Government agencies
Information dissemination
Internet
Languages
Local government
Mass media effects
Political participation
Politics
Public policy
Public services
Qualitative research
Quantitative analysis
Research design
Research methodology
Social media
Social networks
Social research
User generated content
Web 2.0
title Does social media transform city government? A case study of three ASEAN cities: Bandung, Indonesia, Iligan, Philippines and Pukhet, Thailand
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