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Private Data and Public Value : Governance, Green Consumption, and Sustainable Supply Chains / edited by Holly Jarman, Luis F. Luna-Reyes.

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Jarman, Holly., Editor.
Luna-Reyes, Luis F., Editor.
Series:
Public Administration and Information Technology, 2512-1812 ; 26
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Public administration.
Data mining.
Social policy.
Public Administration.
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
Social Policy.
Local Subjects:
Public Administration.
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
Social Policy.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (216 p.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2016.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016.
Summary:
This book investigates the ways in which these systems can promote public value by encouraging the disclosure and reuse of privately-held data in ways that support collective values such as environmental sustainability. Supported by funding from the National Science Foundation, the authors' research team has been working on one such system, designed to enhance consumers ability to access information about the sustainability of the products that they buy and the supply chains that produce them. Pulled by rapidly developing technology and pushed by budget cuts, politicians and public managers are attempting to find ways to increase the public value of their actions. Policymakers are increasingly acknowledging the potential that lies in publicly disclosing more of the data that they hold, as well as incentivizing individuals and organizations to access, use, and combine it in new ways. Due to technological advances which include smarter phones, better ways to track objects and people as they travel, and more efficient data processing, it is now possible to build systems which use shared, transparent data in creative ways. The book adds to the current conversation among academics and practitioners about how to promote public value through data disclosure, focusing particularly on the roles that governments, businesses and non-profit actors can play in this process, making it of interest to both scholars and policy-makers.
Contents:
Introduction: public value and private organizations
Collaboration and trust-building among public and private actors
Labeling, certification, and consumer trust
Privacy, secrecy, and system security
Strategies for collaborative governance
Collaborative standards and hard law
Long-term goals and power structures groups in the longer term
Conclusion: Encouraging private sector transparency.
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
3-319-27823-1

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