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  1. DoGood: examining gamification, civic engagement, and collective intelligence.Sebastian Rehm, Marcus Foth & Peta Mitchell - 2018 - AI and Society 33 (1):27-37.
    The mobile internet provides new and easier ways for people to organise themselves, raise issues, take action, and interact with their city. However, lack of information or motivation often prevents citizens from regularly contributing to the common good. In this paper, we present DoGood, a mobile app that aims at motivating citizens to join civic activities in their local community. Our study asks to what extent gamification can motivate users to participate in civic activities. The term civic activity is not (...)
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  • Community Networks and Public Participation: A Forum for Civic Engagement or a Platform for Ranting Irate Malcontents?Rudy Pugliese, Franz Foltz & Paul Ferber - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (5):388-397.
    Forums of public discussion on Internet Web sites have been promoted by some as having the potential to improve democracy through large increases in civic engagement. Such claims are scoffed at by others. To date, such forums tend to be found more on community networks and commercial Web sites than on sites owned by governments. We thus turn to an examination of forums hosted by a private New Jersey organization, to seek to understand the types and character of discussion taking (...)
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  • Putting the Community Back Into Community Networks: A Content Analysis.Michael A. Horning - 2007 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 27 (5):417-426.
    This study examines the role that community networks can take in fulfilling McQuail's call for a more democratic-participant form of mass media. Community networks, which are online grassroots organizations designed to promote local community initiatives, increased their Internet presence in the 1990s. However, their number has declined in recent years. Earlier research has suggested that community networks fail because they lack a unified identity, have not determined their specific purpose on the Web, and do not provide relevant information to network (...)
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