'Useful' civic hacking for environmental sustainability:knowledge transfer and the International Space Apps Challenge

Authors

  • Sumen Rai University of Adelaide
  • Mary Griffiths

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15353/joci.v12i1.3239

Abstract

Civic hackathons have become a popular, experimental process through which to promote public access to open government data and enable innovative civic uses for the information. The International Space Apps Challenge, led by NASA, is a high-profile event, promoting the use of space-derived data with the aim of contributing solutions to 'grand challenges' such as environmental sustainability. Central to the civic hackathons are the concepts of 'stewardship,' and 'usefulness'. The study explores the promises and realities of civic hacking through analysis of the aims of the organisers, perspectives of participants and the event's outcomes, concluding that hackathon peer processes promote networks for knowledge transfer.

Author Biographies

Sumen Rai, University of Adelaide

Sumen Rai is a defence force analyst and hackathon organiser since 2009.

Mary Griffiths

Associate Professor of Media

Downloads

Published

2016-02-14

Issue

Section

Research Articles