Governing online platforms: From contested to cooperative responsibility external link
Abstract
Online platforms, from Facebook to Twitter, and from Coursera to Uber, have become deeply involved in a wide range of public activities, including journalism, civic engagement, education, and transport. As such, they have started to play a vital role in the realization of important public values and policy objectives associated with these activities. Based on insights from theories about risk sharing and the problem of many hands, this article develops a conceptual framework for the governance of the public role of platforms, and elaborates on the concept of cooperative responsibility for the realization of critical public policy objectives in Europe. It argues that the realization of public values in platform-based public activities cannot be adequately achieved by allocating responsibility to one central actor (as is currently common practice), but should be the result of dynamic interaction between platforms, users, and public institutions.
Links
civic engagement, education, frontpage, Journalism, Online platforms, public values, responsability, transport
Bibtex
Article{Helberger2018,
title = {Governing online platforms: From contested to cooperative responsibility},
author = {Helberger, N. and Pierson, J. and Poell, T.},
url = {https://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/The_Information_Society_2017.pdf},
doi = {https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2017.1391913},
year = {0116},
date = {2018-01-16},
journal = {The Information Society},
volume = {2017},
pages = {},
abstract = {Online platforms, from Facebook to Twitter, and from Coursera to Uber, have become deeply involved in a wide range of public activities, including journalism, civic engagement, education, and transport. As such, they have started to play a vital role in the realization of important public values and policy objectives associated with these activities. Based on insights from theories about risk sharing and the problem of many hands, this article develops a conceptual framework for the governance of the public role of platforms, and elaborates on the concept of cooperative responsibility for the realization of critical public policy objectives in Europe. It argues that the realization of public values in platform-based public activities cannot be adequately achieved by allocating responsibility to one central actor (as is currently common practice), but should be the result of dynamic interaction between platforms, users, and public institutions.},
keywords = {civic engagement, education, frontpage, Journalism, Online platforms, public values, responsability, transport},
}