79 research outputs found
Big Data and AI – A transformational shift for government: So, what next for research?
Big Data and artificial intelligence will have a profound transformational impact on governments around the world. Thus, it is important for scholars to provide a useful analysis on the topic to public managers and policymakers. This study offers an in-depth review of the Policy and Administration literature on the role of Big Data and advanced analytics in the public sector. It provides an overview of the key themes in the research field, namely the application and benefits of Big Data throughout the policy process, and challenges to its adoption and the resulting implications for the public sector. It is argued that research on the subject is still nascent and more should be done to ensure that the theory adds real value to practitioners. A critical assessment of the strengths and limitations of the existing literature is developed, and a future research agenda to address these gaps and enrich our understanding of the topic is proposed
Data & Agency
This introduction to the special issue on data and agency argues that datafication should not only be understood as the process of collecting and analysing data about Internet users, but also as feeding such data back to users, enabling them to orient themselves in the world. It is important that debates about data power recognise that data is also generated, collected and analysed by alternative actors, enhancing rather than undermining the agency of the public. Developing this argument, we first make clear why and how the question of agency should be central to our engagement with data. Subsequently, we discuss how this question has been operationalized in the five contributions to this special issue, which empirically open up the study of alternative forms of datafication. Building on these contributions, we conclude that as data acquire new power, it is vital to explore the space for citizen agency in relation to data structures and to examine the practices of data work, as well as the people involved in these practices
Banks' total factor productivity growth in a developing economy: does globalisation matter?
The paper provides, for the first time, empirical evidence on the impact of economic globalisation on bank total factor productivity in a developing economy. By employing the Malmquist Productivity Index method, we compute the total factor productivity of the Malaysian banking sector during 1998–2007. Examining different dimensions of economic globalisation, we find evidence supporting for greater trade and capital account restrictions and cultural proximity. On the other hand, personal contacts, information flows, and political globalisation seem to exert significant (negative) influence on banks' total factor productivity levels
Urban Struggles with Financialization
The 2008 financial crisis and its impacts on the urban landscape contributed to a
proliferation of research on the financialization of urban space, particularly of housing.
Today, financialization is a mainstream focus of study within geography. But while scholars
have responded to earlier calls to center space and place in their research, it has only been
quite recently that geographers have taken up efforts to politicize and contest the
financialization of urban space. This essay assesses the emerging body of literature on urban
struggles with financialization. It first draws on historical materialist perspectives to situate
financialization within urban contexts, showing why there is a particular relationship between
this process and urban space, and how moments of crisis reveal tensions in this relationship.
Reviewing literature focused on places exposed to the most systemic housing-financial crises
in 2008, the essay then explores how residents, activists, and movements have grappled with
financialization. It argues that a key aspect of such struggles is the ability to make their
presence felt within chains of financial intermediaries or the corporate headquarters of
foreign investors. The essay also highlights how moments of crisis open space for more
radical tactics that disrupt the dominant production of space and emphasize the social value
of housing. It suggests ways to fruitfully expand geographic inquiry into urban struggles with
financialization through focusing on the formation of political subjectivities and engaging
geographies beyond the global north
Useful void: the art of forgetting in the age of ubiquitous computing
Abstract: As humans we have the capacity to remember, and to forget. For millennia remembering was hard, and forgetting easy. By default, we would forget. Digital technology has inverted this. Today, with affordable storage, effortless retrieval and global access remembering has become the default, for us individually and for society as a whole. We store our digital photos irrespective of whether they are good or not - because even choosing which to throw away is too time-consuming, and keep different versions of the documents we work on, just in case we ever need to go back to an earlier one. Google saves every search query, and millions of video surveillance cameras retain our movements. In this article I analyze this shift and link it to technological innovation and information economics. Then I suggest why we may want to worry about the shift, and call for what I term data ecology. In contrast to others I do not call for comprehensive new laws or constitutional adjudication. Instead I propose a simple rule that reinstates the default of forgetting our societies have experienced for millennia, and I show how a combination of law and technology can achieve this shift
Napster's second life? Regulatory dynamics of virtual worlds
Five million registered users and counting - Second Life is the current darling of the media. With its decision to let users build their virtual world and retain intellectual property rights in their creations they broke new ground, then they open-sourced their client software. Soon we may see multiple Second Life-like virtual worlds competing against each other - on what? Should lawmakers care? Should we care
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