Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects

In this study, we analyze city governments’ public presentations of their data-centered projects as a form of data storytelling and reveal how the documents adopt contrasting data presentation techniques to construct and activate two unique ideals of data-driven governance: urban service management...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Seolha Lee, Rachel Warren, Melissa Mazmanian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-09-01
Series:Big Data & Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517251359219
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849253675365564416
author Seolha Lee
Rachel Warren
Melissa Mazmanian
author_facet Seolha Lee
Rachel Warren
Melissa Mazmanian
author_sort Seolha Lee
collection DOAJ
description In this study, we analyze city governments’ public presentations of their data-centered projects as a form of data storytelling and reveal how the documents adopt contrasting data presentation techniques to construct and activate two unique ideals of data-driven governance: urban service management and social reform . When reiterating the familiar narrative of data-drivenness as real-time monitoring and optimization of services, documents demonstrate accomplishments in numbers and keep most of the cities’ data work hidden from the public. In contrast, the emerging narratives of social reform suggest city governments as leaders committed to tackling structural injustices through data-driven approaches and invite the public to interrogate their data work through interactive, open-ended data visualizations. However, we argue that the increased visibility of government data and delegation of power to citizens signaled by the social reform narratives do not succeed in challenging the dominant epistemology or power hierarchy in data-driven regimes. Instead, the signaled values are leveraged to justify an ideal of entrepreneurial citizens in the documents which is still exclusionary. This finding suggests that scholars and civic societies take more nuanced approaches to demands for government transparency and accountability, as well as calls for more attention to the political effects of these mundane forms of data communication between governments and their constituents.
format Article
id doaj-art-2fe2599a43d1467487ffe2becb811cc8
institution Kabale University
issn 2053-9517
language English
publishDate 2025-09-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series Big Data & Society
spelling doaj-art-2fe2599a43d1467487ffe2becb811cc82025-08-20T03:56:14ZengSAGE PublishingBig Data & Society2053-95172025-09-011210.1177/20539517251359219Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projectsSeolha LeeRachel WarrenMelissa MazmanianIn this study, we analyze city governments’ public presentations of their data-centered projects as a form of data storytelling and reveal how the documents adopt contrasting data presentation techniques to construct and activate two unique ideals of data-driven governance: urban service management and social reform . When reiterating the familiar narrative of data-drivenness as real-time monitoring and optimization of services, documents demonstrate accomplishments in numbers and keep most of the cities’ data work hidden from the public. In contrast, the emerging narratives of social reform suggest city governments as leaders committed to tackling structural injustices through data-driven approaches and invite the public to interrogate their data work through interactive, open-ended data visualizations. However, we argue that the increased visibility of government data and delegation of power to citizens signaled by the social reform narratives do not succeed in challenging the dominant epistemology or power hierarchy in data-driven regimes. Instead, the signaled values are leveraged to justify an ideal of entrepreneurial citizens in the documents which is still exclusionary. This finding suggests that scholars and civic societies take more nuanced approaches to demands for government transparency and accountability, as well as calls for more attention to the political effects of these mundane forms of data communication between governments and their constituents.https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517251359219
spellingShingle Seolha Lee
Rachel Warren
Melissa Mazmanian
Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
Big Data & Society
title Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
title_full Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
title_fullStr Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
title_full_unstemmed Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
title_short Efficient service provider or committed social reformer?: Government data storytelling around city data projects
title_sort efficient service provider or committed social reformer government data storytelling around city data projects
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517251359219
work_keys_str_mv AT seolhalee efficientserviceproviderorcommittedsocialreformergovernmentdatastorytellingaroundcitydataprojects
AT rachelwarren efficientserviceproviderorcommittedsocialreformergovernmentdatastorytellingaroundcitydataprojects
AT melissamazmanian efficientserviceproviderorcommittedsocialreformergovernmentdatastorytellingaroundcitydataprojects