Crowdsourcing: 6 examples of public participation in urban management
This article is also available here in Spanish.

Crowdsourcing: 6 examples of public participation in urban management

My list

Author | Lucía Burbano

Citizen participation forms part of the ethos of democracy. Sometimes, however, the traditional channels are not as efficient or as fast as we would them to be. Others fail to take into account all the proposals or concerns relating to urban governance. Crowdsourcing is a solution for the community to collect and share data that can generate a real change in their cities.

What is crowdsourcing?

The term crowdsourcing is made up of the two words ‘crowd’ and ‘outsourcing’. It is an open and distributed collaboration that outsources certain tasks to a large number of people or to a community, through an open invitation.

The aim of this participation is to request ideas and opinions or provide information to improve products, services or processes, normally from social media and platforms that exist for this purpose, such as Yanbal, Innocentive or OpenIDEO.

The latter, for example, specializes in solving complex problems, sharing ideas, and coordinating actions worldwide. One of its most recent campaigns looks for solutions to prevent, treat and beat cancer.

Advantages of crowdsourcing

● Crowdsourcing brings communities together around a common cause or project.● It is an effective way of resolving problems that require a great deal of time and/or investment.● It generates greater commitment among communities, which identify and support the product or the solution.● As it is an anonymous process, the people taking part feel free to express their opinions.● For companies, it is a way of improving a product or service or, simply, getting the opinion of their clients.

Examples related to cities

Crowdsourcing can also be an extremely useful tool for designing urban governance strategies among public-private sectors and citizens.

Crowdsourcing 2

Improve traffic

Waze is a mobile app with which drivers report road incidents or accidents so that users can know, in real time, what is happening on our roads. It has over 140 million registered users and it is one of the most popular navigation solutions worldwide.

Listen to communities

The PPGIS platform serves as a forum for discussing issues, sharing experiences and good practices related to participatory mapping. The Participation GIS (PGIS), Public Participation GIS (PPGIS ) and voluntary geographic information (VGI) discuss issues regarding the sustainable management of natural resources and traditional ownership rights in developing countries and among Indigenous communities around the world.

Its professional members include activists, researchers, students, personnel from international organizations, NGOs and government entities.

Monitoring polluting emissions

Air Quality Egg is a sensor system designed to collect high resolution readings of NO2 and CO2 emissions either indoors or outdoors. These two gases are the elements that are most indicative of urban air pollution that can be detected with low-cost sensors.

Air Quality Egg also enables citizens to take part in the debate regarding the quality of air in their cities.

Avoid dangerous areas

Safetipin, an app that maps safe and unsafe areas, allows users to enter details about street lighting, CCTV and surveillance cameras and the quality of road surfaces, together with a score of the perceived safety of a neighborhood.

The app notifies users of the nearest safe point to an unsafe area. The app was created as a result of the rape and murder of Jyoti Singh in New Delhi in 2012, an incident that led to protests across the country to stop the violence against women and it highlighted the dangers they face in urban areas.

Direct contact with governors

Ctzen enables incidents to be reported in real time and to perform real time monitoring. By taking photographs, the app accurately captures the location and sends the information to the local government so that it can rapidly and efficiently address the mattes that most concern citizens.

Detect pests and other incidents related to public health.

In 2018, an initiative was conducted in Colombia in which, by using a mobile app, residents identified the location of mosquito breeding grounds. All the data collected were transferred to the public health authorities so they could destroy the breeding grounds and educate the local community on how to get rid of mosquito colonies.

Photographs | Unsplash/Tobias, Unsplash/Kirill Tonkikh

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

BS
Burcuhan Sener
Marmara Municipalities Union
International Cooperation Coordinator
AP
Aldemar Palacio Hernández
Organización para el Desarrollo de América Latina y El Caribe - ONWARD -
RK
ritesh kumar
ku leuven
research scholar
DS
Douglas Severo
ZOUPHY Tecnologia Humanizada para Educar e Cuidar.
SS
Sérgio Saraiva
Baía do Tejo
Board member
DP
DAVID PUENTES JURADO
GOVERNMENT OF CATALONIA
CIO
TY
Tomohito Yanada
salesforce.com Co.,Ltd.
Senior Manager of Public Sector Business, Industries Transformation
AK
Aashna Kathpalia
Self
Architect
SA
Sana Afouaiz
Womenpreneur
AM
Audouin Maxime
Keolis
Head of innovation lab
EA
edilson alvitres ipnaque
niguno
MT
malda Takieddine
Univeristy of Washington
JD
Juan Díaz
Autonomous University of Ciudad Juarez
Undergraduate
AD
AGOSTINHO DE REZENDE
DRZ
CEO da empresa DRZ Geotecnologia e Consultoria Ltda
EB
Elisabet Berges Franco
Aigües de Barcelona
AZ
Adolfo Zelada
APROBO
Empresa agroexportadora de cooperativa agraria
ST
Svetlana Tesic
Alliance of European Mayors
CoFounder and Public Affairs Director
LM
Lukasz Mastalerz
Think Lodz
GN
Guido Napolitano
Municipalidad de Rosario
Coordinador de cultura del distrito norte de la ciudad de rosario
AN
Arthur Nasciutti Prudente
Madrona Fialho Advogados