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Information infrastructures and public goods: analytical and practical implications for SDI

Published: 01 January 2007 Publication History

Abstract

Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs) are envisioned to increase efficiency, transparency and equity, but realising this potential has proven problematic. We argue that insights from studies of large-scale, integrated but distributed information systems, dubbed "information infrastructures," are applicable. This perspective may help address an important dimension of SDIs: their character of being public goods rather than private assets. We identify and illustrate four key aspects of information infrastructures that underpin such a public good's focus. First, we advocate the necessity of deploying a socio-technical rather than a limited technical perspective. We further argue that the notion of installed base is central, that it is important to be aware of the "politics of representations" and to accept the unavoidable "messiness" of reality. We illustrate these concepts through examples from health care in developing countries, an area particularly concerned with the potential to increase equity.

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cover image Information Technology for Development
Information Technology for Development  Volume 13, Issue 1
January 2007
100 pages

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United States

Publication History

Published: 01 January 2007

Author Tags

  1. GIS
  2. SDI
  3. geographical information systems
  4. health care socio-technical
  5. information infrastructures
  6. installed base
  7. public goods
  8. spatial data infrastructures

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