Understanding different levels of e-participation in Spanish municipalities based on city and citizen profiles
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Emerald
Materia
Open government Participation models Arnstein’s ladder Factors drivers Collaboration
Fecha
2025-06-17Referencia bibliográfica
Alcaide Muñoz, L., Rodríguez Bolívar, M.P. and Villamayor Arellano, C.L. (2025), "Understanding different levels of e-participation in Spanish municipalities based on city and citizen profiles", Online Information Review, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/OIR-04-2025-0241
Patrocinador
Regional Government of Andalusia (PY20_00314 and B-SEJ-556-UGR-20)Resumen
Purpose – Our study focuses on analysing the e-Participation channels offered by the Spanish local
governments (SLGs) to determine the various e-Participation models adopted and to assess whether these
models are influenced by the characteristics of both the cities and the citizens.
Design/methodology/approach – We analysed the official websites of SLGs using a participation steps
framework based on Arnstein’s ladder of citizen participation. Our study aims to assess how city profiles
influence the adoption of participation management models by municipal governments, employing cluster
analysis and tests of differences.
Findings – In this sense, one of the main findings is that the largest municipalities, which are considered smart
cities, tend to have more developed participation models. Additionally, these cities are mainly characterized by
having a high population density and citizens with high educational levels.
Practical implications – Politicians and public managersshould implement open government projects, offering
interactive participation tools that promote collaboration and co-creation initiatives. In addition, our findings
seem to confirm the use of information and communication technology by policymakers to increase the
legitimacy of public actions, but they do not ultimately delegate any power to the citizenry.
Originality/value – There is no previous evidence about different implementation models of e-Participation in
the urban context or the influence of contextual factors (city profile and/or citizen profile) on these different
models, which could be very relevant for explaining how politicians and public managers are designing public
policies to create various open and collaborative models of cities.