School of Business
Digital government and wicked problems: Solution or problem?
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The theme of the 16th International Conference on Digital Government Research (dg.o 2015) - ''Digital Government and Wicked Problems'' - drew attention to the increasingly complex global problems we are facing today. In the late 1960s, the term ''wicked problems'' was coined to refer to societal and public planning problems that had no definitive solutions [1,2]. Many problems, such as those identified in the theme of the conference - climate change, urbanization, and inequality - often exhibit the characteristics of ''wickedness'' in the sense that they are both difficult to define and solve. The selection of this theme for dg.o 2015 reflects the digital government research community's ambition and dedication to achieve a degree of understanding necessary to address some of the most intractable of these problems with the aid of emerging technologies. This special issue includes seven of the best papers from the dg.o 2015 conference. In this editorial, we highlight the characteristics of ''wicked problems'' briefly, and the way in which the term is relevant in digital government research. We then introduce the articles selected for this special issue. Lastly, we provide suggestions to foster future research that addresses the nature of ''wickedness'' in digital government initiatives.
Publication Title
Information Polity
Publication Date
2016
Volume
21
Issue
3
First Page
215
Last Page
221
ISSN
1570-1255
DOI
10.3233/IP-160395
Keywords
crisis management, digital divide, digital government, open data, public health, smart grid, social media, Wicked problems
Repository Citation
Zhang, Jing and Kim, Yushim, "Digital government and wicked problems: Solution or problem?" (2016). School of Business. 20.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_school_of_management/20