Using Crowd-Sourced Data to Study Public Services: Lessons from Urban India

被引:0
作者
Alison E. Post
Anustubh Agnihotri
Christopher Hyun
机构
[1] University of California,
[2] Berkeley,undefined
来源
Studies in Comparative International Development | 2018年 / 53卷
关键词
Crowd-sourcing; Public services; Water; India; Street level bureaucracy; Frontline worker;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
As cities throughout the developing world grow, they often expand more quickly than the infrastructure and service delivery networks that provide residents with basic necessities such as water and public safety. Why do some cities deliver more effective infrastructure and services in the face of rapid growth than others? Why do some households and communities secure better services than others? Answering these questions requires studying the large, politicized bureaucracies charged with providing urban services, especially the relationships between frontline workers, agency managers, and citizens in informal settlements. Researchers investigating public service delivery in cities of the Global South, however, have faced acute data scarcity when addressing these themes. The recent emergence of crowd-sourced data offers researchers new means of addressing such questions. In this paper, we draw on our own research on the politics of urban water delivery in India to highlight new types of analysis that are possible using crowd-sourced data and propose solutions to common pitfalls associated with analyzing it. These insights should be of use for researchers working on a broad range of topics in comparative politics where crowd-sourced data could provide leverage, such as protest politics, conflict processes, public opinion, and law and order.
引用
收藏
页码:324 / 342
页数:18
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [1] Anand N(2012)Municipal disconnect: on abject water and its urban infrastructures Ethnography 13 487-509
  • [2] Auerbach A(2016)Clients and communities: the political economy of party network organization and development in India’s urban slums World Politics 68 111-148
  • [3] Bailard CS(2012)A field experiment on the internet’s effect in an African election: savvier citizens, disaffected voters, or both? J Commun 62 330-344
  • [4] Barberá P(2015)Birds of the same feather tweet together: Bayesian ideal point estimation using Twitter data Polit Anal 23 76-91
  • [5] Bond R(2015)Quantifying social media’s political space: estimating ideology from publicly revealed preferences on Facebook Am Polit Sci Rev 109 62-78
  • [6] Messing S(2012)Towards an integrated crowdsourcing definition J Inf Sci 38 189-200
  • [7] Estellés-Arolas E(2012)Open government and citizen participation in law enforcement via crowd mapping IEEE Intell Syst 27 63-69
  • [8] González-Ladrón-de-Guevara F(2014)“I wld like u WMP to extend electricity 2 our village”: on information technology and interest articulation Am Polit Sci Rev 108 688-705
  • [9] Furtado V(2014)Taarifa: improving public service provision in the developing world through a crowd-sourced location based reporting application OSGeo J 13 34-40
  • [10] Caminha C(2015)Anti-Americanism or anti-interventionism in Arabic Twitter discourses Perspect Polit 13 55-73