The Internet, Policy & Politics Conferences

Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford

John Prpić, Araz Taeihagh, James Melton Jr: A Framework for Policy Crowdsourcing

John Prpić, Beedie School of Business - Simon Fraser University

Araz Taeihagh, City Futures Research Centre - University of New South Wales

James Melton Jr, College of Business Administration - Central Michigan University

 

What is the state of the literature in respect to Crowdsourcing for policy making? This work attempts to answer this question by collecting, categorizing, and situating the extant research investigating Crowdsourcing for policy, within the broader Crowdsourcing literature. To do so, the work first extends the Crowdsourcing literature by introducing, defining, explaining, and using seven universal characteristics of all general Crowdsourcing techniques, to vividly draw-out the relative trade-offs of each mode of Crowdsourcing. From this beginning, the work systematically and explicitly weds the three types of Crowdsourcing to the stages of the Policy cycle as a method of situating the extant literature spanning both domains. Thereafter, we discuss the trends, highlighting the research gaps, and outline the overlaps in the research on Crowdsourcing for policy, stemming from our analysis.

Authors: 
John Prpić, Araz Taeihagh, James Melton Jr