govloop logo link to homepage

  • Training
  • Resources
  • Video
  • NextGen
  • Blog
    • Community Posts
    • Career
      • Human Resources
      • Leadership
      • Policy
      • Professional Development
      • Project Management
    • Communications
      • Citizen Engagement
      • Digital Government
      • Social Media
    • Tech
      • Acquisition
      • Analytics
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Big Data
      • CIO Conversations
      • Cloud
      • Cybersecurity
      • Emerging Tech
      • GIS
      • IT Modernization
      • Mobile
      • Open Data
    • State and Local
  • About Us
    • Partner With GovLoop
  • Register
  • Log In

Digital Government

When Does Digital Engagement Lead to Government Responsiveness?

Tiago Peixoto January 19, 2016

A new background paper for the 2016 World Development Report  (Digital Dividends) has just been published. This paper reviews evidence on the use of 23 information and communication technology (ICT) platforms to project citizen voice to improve public service delivery. This meta-analysis focuses on empirical studies of initiatives in the global South, highlighting both citizen uptake (‘yelp’) and the degree to which public service providers respond to expressions of citizen voice (‘teeth’). The conceptual framework further distinguishes between two trajectories for ICT-enabled citizen voice: Upwards accountability occurs when users provide feedback directly to

The conceptual framework further distinguishes between two trajectories for ICT-enabled citizen voice: Upwards accountability occurs when users provide feedback directly to decision-makers in real time, allowing policy-makers and program managers to identify and address service delivery problems – but at their discretion. Downwards accountability, in contrast, occurs either through real-time user feedback or less immediate forms of collective civic action that publicly call on service providers to become more accountable and depends less exclusively on decision- makers’ discretion about whether or not to act on the information provided.

This distinction between the ways in which ICT platforms mediate the relationship between citizens and service providers allows for a precise analytical focus on how different dimensions of such platforms contribute to public sector responsiveness. These cases suggest that while ICT platforms have been relevant in increasing policymakers’ and senior managers’ capacity to respond, most of them have yet to influence their willingness to do so.

You can download the paper here.

Tags: citizen engagement, digital engagement, digital government, tech, World Bank

Related Content

  • The AI-Driven Tools That Transform Service Delivery and Workflow Efficiency

  • Preserve Service Continuity, Save Money and Modernize IT at Your Own Speed

  • The New Digital Government Blueprint

Leave a Comment

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Articles on GovLoop

  • The AI-Driven Tools That Transform Service Delivery and Workflow Efficiency
  • NextGen: Lead, Learn, and Connect
  • Agentic AI Brings Greater Situational Awareness to Physical Security
  • Preserve Service Continuity, Save Money and Modernize IT at Your Own Speed
  • A Resilient Workforce Is Curious and Cross-Skilled
  • Beyond Denying Access: Minimizing the Damage From a Cyber Breach
  • Feeling Burned Out? Try These Ideas.
  • March Into Professional Development
  • Get Inspired to Improve Team Motivation
  • Improving Decision Velocity With AI-Native Platforms 

Previous

Innovative Methods Reshaping Government Recruitment

Next

How to Be a Better Blogger

govloop grey logo link to homepage

© 2026 GovLoop

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Sitemap
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
x