Padgets
Jan. 01, 2010 to July 01, 2013
Overview
The PADGETS project (Policy Gadgets Mashing underlying Group Knowledge in Web 2.0 Media) aims at bringing together two well established domains, the mashup architectural approach of web 2.0 for creating web applications (gadgets) and the methodology of system dynamics in analyzing complex system behavior. The objective is to design, develop and deploy a prototype toolset that will allow policy makers to graphically create web applications that will be deployed in the environment of underlying knowledge in Web 2.0 media.
Project Summary
Policy Gadgets Mashing Underlying Group Knowledge in Web 2.0 Media
The ever growing visibility of the web as a medium that exhibits the potential to attract and maintain society’s involvement, coupled with the need for a citizen centric and socially‐rooted policy making, calls for novel tools with the capability to analyze society’s input and forecast the possible impact of policies. Thus, new open governance models evolve and are being realised on top of social networking and cloud infrastructures.
The PADGETS project aims at bringing together two well established domains, the mash‐up architectural approach of web 2.0 for creating web applications (gadgets) and societal modeling and simulation methodologies, in analyzing complex system behavior. The objective is to design, develop and deploy a prototype toolset that will allow policy makers to create web applications that will be deployed in the environment of underlying knowledge in Web 2.0 media.
For this reason, the project introduces the concept of Policy Gadget (PADGET) – similarly to the approach of gadget applications in web 2.0 – to represent a micro web application that combines a policy message with underlying group knowledge in social media (in the form of content and user activities) and interacts with end users in popular locations (such as social networks, blogs, forums, news sites, etc) in order to get and convey their input to policy makers.
Through the PADGETS platform, any policy can become a reusable and communicable web application to be used in relation to underlying content and social activities over the web. Policy makers will be able to set up such applications on their own and use them to communicate their policies to the public. People can use these applications as they use everyday services and policy makers can track the results of this interaction back to their policy making process to assist them in reaching solid decisions that represent society’s input and aspirations.
The PADGETS project is funded by the European Union.