The Digital Economy Research Centre (DERC) will theorise, design, develop, and evaluate new digitally mediated models of citizen participation that engage communities, the third sector, local government and (crucially) the commercial digital economy in developing the future of local service provision and local democracy.
DERC will deliver a sustained program of multi- and cross- disciplinary research using research methods that are participatory, action-based, and embedded in the real world. The research approach will operate across multiple scales (e.g. individual, family, community, institution) and involve long-term embedded research activity at scale.
The overarching challenges are significant:
- the development of new technologies and cloud-based platforms to provide access to open and citizen-generated data, big data analytics and software services at scale to support trusted communication, transactions, and co-production between coalitions of citizens, local government, the third and commercial sectors;
- the development of participatory methods to design digital services to support citizen prosumption at the scales of communities and beyond;
- the development of new cross-disciplinary insights into the role of digital technologies to support these service delivery contexts as well as understandings of the interdependency between contexts and their corresponding services.
The backbone of this research agenda is a commitment to social inclusion and the utilisation of participatory processes for user engagement, consultation and representation in the design and adoption of new forms of digital services. The main research themes of DERC address the development of models of digitally enabled citizen participation in local democracy (planning), public health, social care and education, and the nature of new civic media to support these.
The Centre’s research will be conducted in the context of local government service provision in the Northeast of England, in close partnership with Newcastle City Council, Gateshead Council and Northumberland, and supported by a consortium of key commercial, third sector and professional body partners. DERC’s extensive program of research, knowledge exchange and public engagement activities will involve over 20 postdoctoral researchers and 25 investigators from Computer Science (HCI, Social Computing, Cloud Computing, Security), Business & Economics, Behavioural Science, Planning, Education, Statistics, Social Gerontology, Public Health and Health Services Research.
Funding: Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Collaborators: Patrick Olivier (Newcastle University, Principal Investigator), Peter Wright (Newcastle University), David Kirk (Newcastle University), Katie Brittain (Newcastle University), Falko Sniehotta (Newcastle University), Geoff Vigar (Newcastle University), Rob Wilson (Newcastle University), Lynne Corner (Newcastle University), Darren Wilkinson (Newcastle University), Barbara Hanratty (Newcastle University), Sugatra Mitra (Newcastle University), Liz Todd (Newcastle University), Thomas Gross (Newcastle University), Thomas Ploetz (Newcastle University), Ashley Adamson (Newcastle University), Paul Watson (Newcastle University), Paolo Missier (Newcastle University), Phil James (Newcastle University), Daniel Zizzo (Newcastle University), Aad van Moorsel (Newcastle University), Madeline Balaam (Newcastle University), Mark Tewdwr-Jones (Newcastle University), Rob Comer(Newcastle University), Pam Briggs (Northumbria University), Shaun Lawson (Northumbria University).
Timescale: November 2015 to October 2020.