Over the past two decades, openness (e.g. ‘open’ innovation, ‘open’ education and ‘open’ strategy) has been of increasing interest for researchers and of increasing relevance to practitioners. Openness is often deeply embedded in information technology (IT) and can be both a driver for and a result of innovative IT. To clarify the concept of “openness”, we provide an overview of the scope of cross-disciplinary research on openness. Based on this overview, we develop a framework of openness, which proposes a higher-order concept of “openness” characterised by transparency, access, participation and democracy. The framework further distinguishes open resources, open processes and the effects of opening on particular domains. To provide the historical context and to appreciate the role of IT in openness, we discuss two historical examples of openness: the introduction of an open science model in academia (openness without IT) and the emergence of open source software development (openness with IT). We conclude by highlighting some concerns with and limitations of “openness”.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ls_leimeister
%A Schlagwein, Daniel
%A Conboy, Kieran
%A Feller, Joseph
%A Leimeister, Jan Marco
%A Morgan, Lorraine
%D 2017
%I Palgrave Macmillan UK
%J Journal of Information Technology (JIT)
%K access concept_development democracy framework information_technology itegpub open_processes open_resources open_science open_source_software_development openness participation pub_jml transparency
%N 4
%P 297-305
%R https://doi.org/10.1057/s41265-017-0049-3
%T ‘‘Openness’’ with and without Information Technology: a framework and a brief history
%U http://pubs.wi-kassel.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/JML_688.pdf
%V 32
%X Over the past two decades, openness (e.g. ‘open’ innovation, ‘open’ education and ‘open’ strategy) has been of increasing interest for researchers and of increasing relevance to practitioners. Openness is often deeply embedded in information technology (IT) and can be both a driver for and a result of innovative IT. To clarify the concept of “openness”, we provide an overview of the scope of cross-disciplinary research on openness. Based on this overview, we develop a framework of openness, which proposes a higher-order concept of “openness” characterised by transparency, access, participation and democracy. The framework further distinguishes open resources, open processes and the effects of opening on particular domains. To provide the historical context and to appreciate the role of IT in openness, we discuss two historical examples of openness: the introduction of an open science model in academia (openness without IT) and the emergence of open source software development (openness with IT). We conclude by highlighting some concerns with and limitations of “openness”.
@article{ls_leimeister,
abstract = {Over the past two decades, openness (e.g. ‘open’ innovation, ‘open’ education and ‘open’ strategy) has been of increasing interest for researchers and of increasing relevance to practitioners. Openness is often deeply embedded in information technology (IT) and can be both a driver for and a result of innovative IT. To clarify the concept of “openness”, we provide an overview of the scope of cross-disciplinary research on openness. Based on this overview, we develop a framework of openness, which proposes a higher-order concept of “openness” characterised by transparency, access, participation and democracy. The framework further distinguishes open resources, open processes and the effects of opening on particular domains. To provide the historical context and to appreciate the role of IT in openness, we discuss two historical examples of openness: the introduction of an open science model in academia (openness without IT) and the emergence of open source software development (openness with IT). We conclude by highlighting some concerns with and limitations of “openness”.},
added-at = {2018-06-05T19:16:04.000+0200},
author = {Schlagwein, Daniel and Conboy, Kieran and Feller, Joseph and Leimeister, Jan Marco and Morgan, Lorraine},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2959d081105859278fabe41ccf13f4a2e/ls_leimeister},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1057/s41265-017-0049-3},
interhash = {823d9739722e4cb0f84f48d9f60e44cd},
intrahash = {959d081105859278fabe41ccf13f4a2e},
issn = {1466-4437},
journal = {Journal of Information Technology (JIT)},
keywords = {access concept_development democracy framework information_technology itegpub open_processes open_resources open_science open_source_software_development openness participation pub_jml transparency},
number = 4,
pages = {297-305},
publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan UK},
timestamp = {2023-09-20T11:44:03.000+0200},
title = {‘‘Openness’’ with and without Information Technology: a framework and a brief history},
url = {http://pubs.wi-kassel.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/JML_688.pdf},
volume = 32,
year = 2017
}