COINs for Government: Collaborative Innovation Networks used in nascent US Government initiatives
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In: Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 26, 01.01.2011, p. 136-146.
Research output: Journal contributions › Conference article in journal › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - COINs for Government
T2 - Collaborative Innovation Networks used in nascent US Government initiatives
AU - Wise, Sean
AU - Miric, Milan
AU - Gegenhuber, Thomas
N1 - Special issue: The 2nd Collaborative Innovation Networks Conference - COINs2010
PY - 2011/1/1
Y1 - 2011/1/1
N2 - With the growing success of internet based collaborative for profit ventures, including Innocentive, VenCorps, Threadless and many others, governments have begun to take notice. Recent public sector initiatives, including Open.gov, Peer 2 Patent, innovation.ED.gov amongst others, have begun to leverage collaborative internet media through similar means as their for profit cousins. On the basis of the Collective Intelligence Genome framework. which was developed to describe private sector ventures, this study reviewed the recent public sector initiatives launched by the American federal government. Our goal was to examine if, and how, the Genome construct would apply to not for profit ventures intimated by the U.S. federal government. Our findings show that while the model fits generally, some extension was required. Our findings make the case for an expanded genome framework with four new genes to describe public sector ventures. Our study concludes that with the use of these new genes it is possible to apply the Collective Intelligence Genome framework to all existing public sector ventures.
AB - With the growing success of internet based collaborative for profit ventures, including Innocentive, VenCorps, Threadless and many others, governments have begun to take notice. Recent public sector initiatives, including Open.gov, Peer 2 Patent, innovation.ED.gov amongst others, have begun to leverage collaborative internet media through similar means as their for profit cousins. On the basis of the Collective Intelligence Genome framework. which was developed to describe private sector ventures, this study reviewed the recent public sector initiatives launched by the American federal government. Our goal was to examine if, and how, the Genome construct would apply to not for profit ventures intimated by the U.S. federal government. Our findings show that while the model fits generally, some extension was required. Our findings make the case for an expanded genome framework with four new genes to describe public sector ventures. Our study concludes that with the use of these new genes it is possible to apply the Collective Intelligence Genome framework to all existing public sector ventures.
KW - Management studies
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/53c277f7-c493-3e46-90bc-1191b03bc4b2/
U2 - 10.1016/j.sbspro.2011.10.570
DO - 10.1016/j.sbspro.2011.10.570
M3 - Conference article in journal
VL - 26
SP - 136
EP - 146
JO - Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences
JF - Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences
SN - 1877-0428
ER -