Volunteer Co-production in Emergency Management in Excluded Areas

Q2 Social Sciences
Sofie Pilemalm
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This study explores ICT-enabled co-production using civil citizens and semi-professionals as volunteer first responders in excluded areas, in order to identify key factors and to compare the groups. It shows that volunteers can make a major difference if arriving first at an emergency site, e.g. saving lives, administering CPR and extinguishing fires. The semi-professionals are more protected than civil citizens where challenges relate to individual versus collective engagement, gender aspects, language barriers or insufficient legal protection. However, the citizens have an advantage in relying on easily accessible ICT support installed on their own mobile phones. For the initiatives to expand and enable long-term engagement, calibrated ICT solutions matching competence, role and language with incident and area are needed. The study confirms previous research arguing for the merging of policy science and information systems research in a rapidly digitalized public-sector transformation, but adds that they need to be complemented by perspectives from sociology in initiatives involving excluded areas.
在被排除地区的应急管理中自愿合作制作
本研究探讨了利用信通技术支持的联合生产,利用公民和半专业人士作为排除地区的志愿第一响应者,以确定关键因素并对群体进行比较。它表明,如果志愿者首先到达紧急地点,例如挽救生命、实施心肺复苏术和灭火,就可以发挥重大作用。在挑战涉及个人与集体参与、性别方面、语言障碍或法律保护不足的情况下,半专业人员比公民受到更多保护。然而,公民在依赖安装在他们自己的移动电话上的易于访问的信息通信技术支持方面具有优势。为了扩大和实现长期参与,需要校准ICT解决方案,使其与事件和地区的能力、角色和语言相匹配。该研究证实了先前的研究,该研究主张在快速数字化的公共部门转型中将政策科学和信息系统研究结合起来,但它补充说,在涉及被排除领域的举措中,它们需要得到社会学观点的补充。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
eJournal of eDemocracy and Open Government
eJournal of eDemocracy and Open Government Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
26 weeks
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