The digital cage: Administrative exclusion through information architecture - The case of the Dutch civil registry's master data management system

被引:77
|
作者
Peeters, Rik [1 ]
Widlak, Arjan [2 ]
机构
[1] CIDE, Carretera Mexico Toluca 3655, Ciudad De Mexico 01210, Mexico
[2] Kafkabrigade Fdn, Bilderdijkstr 79-N, NL-1053 KM Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
Bureaucracy; Iron cage; Civil registry; Administrative exclusion; Administrative burdens; Master data management systems; IRON CAGE; BURDEN; CITIZENSHIP; BUREAUCRACY; GOVERNMENT; DISCRETION; DEMOCRACY; LEVEL; STATE;
D O I
10.1016/j.giq.2018.02.003
中图分类号
G25 [图书馆学、图书馆事业]; G35 [情报学、情报工作];
学科分类号
1205 ; 120501 ;
摘要
This article analyses the unintended consequences of master data management systems in the administrative state for the access of citizens to public services and benefits. We analyse the case of the Dutch civil registry, in which hundreds of (semi-)public organisations use the information from the civil registry to determine whether people are eligible for their services. We use the framework of administrative burdens and administrative exclusion to show that this system turns the consequences of mutations in registration into a black box, produces legal contamination by forcing its own address definition upon user organisations, reduces the discretionary space of street-level bureaucrats to handle social complexity and unintended consequences of the system, and creates a behavioural incentive in which municipalities are pushed into the role of enforcers rather than registers. The result is a 'digital cage': an exclusionary infrastructure that hinges on information architecture instead of Weberian rules and procedures. These findings increase our understanding of master data management systems, emphasise the importance of understanding information architecture as an ethical issue, and help us develop a new vocabulary for understanding and studying administrative burdens as part of a bureaucratic infrastructure.
引用
收藏
页码:175 / 183
页数:9
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Using a Base Registry Key in Disaster Information Management: A Dutch Case Study on Linked Data
    van Aalst, Jan-Willem
    van Leeuwen, Bart
    Peters, Rob
    INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS FOR CRISIS MANAGEMENT: GEO-INFORMATION FOR DISASTER MANAGEMENT (GI4DM) 2012, 2013, : 357 - 365
  • [2] Master Data Management Planning: A Case Study of Flight Information System at PT Angkasa Pura I (Persero)
    Putra, R. I. P.
    Nurahman, J. P.
    Yana, R. R.
    Winarno, H.
    Hidayanto, A. N.
    Harahap, N. C.
    8TH ENGINEERING INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2019, 2020, 1444
  • [3] DEALING WITH BIG DATA IN AGRICULTURE THROUGH MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM : A CASE OF COORDINATED RICE RESEARCH
    Sailaja, B.
    Meera, Shaik N.
    Gayatri, S.
    Kumar, R. Nagarjuna
    Babu, V. Ravindra
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND STATISTICAL SCIENCES, 2016, 12 (02): : 537 - 545
  • [4] Can administrative health data be used to estimate population level birth and child mortality estimates? A comparison of India?s Health Information Management System data with nationally representative survey data
    Chatterjee, Pritha
    Gupta, Aashish
    Subramanian, S. V.
    SSM-POPULATION HEALTH, 2022, 19
  • [5] Designing and Development of the Aerial Surveying Digital Data Management Information System Based on Two-tier C/S Structure Model
    Ma Deying
    Lai Hongbin
    PROGRESS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, PTS 1-4, 2013, 610-613 : 3702 - +
  • [6] Designing and Development of the Aerial Surveying Digital Data Management Information System Based on Two-tier C/S Structure Model
    Ma Deying
    Lai Hongbin
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2011 INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM - GEOSPATIAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & DISASTER PREVENTION AND REDUCTION, 2011, : 41 - 47
  • [7] Blockchain-based Data Storage Security Architecture for e-Health Care Systems: A Case of Government of Tanzania Hospital Management Information System
    Mnyawi, Richard
    Kombe, Cleverence
    Sam, Anael
    Nyambo, Devotha
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND NETWORK SECURITY, 2022, 22 (03): : 364 - 374