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ARTICLES

Open data and e-government – related or competing ecosystems: a paradox of open government and promise of civic engagement in EstoniaFootnote*

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ABSTRACT

The article analyzes an open data movement in an unusual context of highly developed digital economy and widespread popularity of e-government services in a country that is universally well-known as one of the global leaders in promoting information society and electronic democracy, but paradoxically demonstrating modest results in propagating a presumably related concept of open government data. In this regard, paying special attention to the investigation of main drivers, stakeholders and challenges of the open data movement in Estonia, the author argues that a highly centralized administrative policy that has been widely used previously by authorities in advancing various technology-driven public reforms, which partly explains a truly impressive advance of this Nordic state in e-government, e-commerce, e-banking and evoting, does not necessarily lead to same effective results in the open data domain. On the contrary, the presence of established democratic institutions and developed civil society as well as an incredibly advanced and dynamic private ICTindustry that values competition and professional curiosity along with a very strong sense of patriotism and adherence to a particular neighborhood deeply rooted in Estonian society has played a much more important role in diffusing the concept rather than just traditional government directives and strategies.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Maxat Kassen is a Professor of Political Science in Eurasian Humanities Institute in Astana, Kazakhstan. He is a former head of foreign information service in the Kazakh national information agency – Kazinform (2003–2004). He is also a former Fulbright Visiting Scholar in University of Illinois at Chicago (2011–2012) and fellow of the Annenberg-Oxford Summer Institute at University of Oxford (2011). His research focuses on studying e-government technologies, globalization of open data phenomena and digital diplomacy. He has more than 40 works on digital politics published in various impact factor journals in the USA, Europe, Russia and Kazakhstan and author of two books entitled “Understanding systems of e-government: e-federalism and e-centralism in the United States and Kazakhstan” (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2015) and “E-government in Kazakhstan: a case study of multidimensional phenomena” (Routledge, 2016).

Notes

* Annika Andersson is the accepting Editor for this paper.

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