The role of technologies and citizen organizations in decentralized forms of participation. A case study about residential streets in Vienna

Citizen participation is a complicated piece of the urban development puzzle as it is prone to conflicts and manipulation. However, new, partly unsanctioned methods of citizen participation have appeared in recent years, opening new forms of engagement for citizens. At the same time, technology is i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Technology in society 2021-08, Vol.66, p.101604, Article 101604
Hauptverfasser: Carvajal Bermúdez, Juan Carlos, König, Reinhard
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description Citizen participation is a complicated piece of the urban development puzzle as it is prone to conflicts and manipulation. However, new, partly unsanctioned methods of citizen participation have appeared in recent years, opening new forms of engagement for citizens. At the same time, technology is increasingly being used to change the relationship between institutions, experts and citizens. However, the impact of such technologies in citizen engagement has not been systematically measured. Using residential streets in Vienna as a case study, this paper explores the impact of web technologies in the engagement of citizens. Three data collection methods were used: an online survey, expert interviews, and automated data collection. The results show that web-based maps can inform and inspire citizens, however, they will more likely only sustain current patterns of engagement. Further, collaborating with citizen initiatives proved to have a significant impact on the adoption and usage of online tools. This speaks strongly for co-creation approaches, where citizen organizations are included from an early stage in the development of the tools. •Residential streets in Vienna are an unexplored opportunity of engagement.•Online tools can inform and inspire citizens but they would most likely continue current engagement patterns.•Collaborations with citizen organizations significantly boost the communication and adoption of tools for engagement.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Case studies
Citizen participation
Data collection
Decentralization
Internet
Manipulation
Organizations
Polls & surveys
Public participation
Public space
Streets
Technology
Urban development
Urban-informatics
title The role of technologies and citizen organizations in decentralized forms of participation. A case study about residential streets in Vienna
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