The Internet and Public Policy

Citation:

Margetts, H. (2009). “The Internet and Public Policy”. In Policy & Internet, 1 (1). Berkeley: Berkeley Electronic Press.

Work data:

ISSN: 1944-2866

Type of work: Article (academic)

Categories:

e-Democracy | e-Government & e-Administration | Information Society | Politics and Political Science

Abstract:

This article looks at the role of the Internet in policymaking, identifying potential policy effects of widespread use of the Internet by citizens, firms, governments and voluntary organizations. It considers how the Internet and Internet-enabled social change might impact upon each of the four ’tools’ of government policy – nodality, authority, treasure and organization – and how it might impact upon the mix of tools that policymakers select. It suggests a number of values normally associated with the Internet – innovation, trust, openness and equity – that might be expected to emerge in policy trends. It discusses the implications of Internet-driven change for public policy research, pinpointing some key methodologies that will become increasingly important; generation of large-scale transactional data; network analysis and experimental methods. The article argues that we cannot understand, analyse or make public policy without understanding the technological, social and economic shifts associated with the Internet – a task that the journal Policy & Internet is poised to undertake.