In their day-to-day operations, public sector organizations collect and use huge amounts of information that if made available for re-use would con-tribute to economic growth. Much of this information directly or indirectly can lead to the identification of ‘natural persons’ and, as such, the personal data protection regulation applies to it. According to the General Data Pro-tection Regulation (GDPR) issued by the EU in 2016, unless it is regulated by a specific legislation, personal information can be processed only based on the data subject’s explicit consent. This raises the question of what strategies public organizations could implement to make the data subjects willing to allow the (possible) re-use of their personal information. By elaborating on evidences from the economics and the psychology of privacy literature, the paper suggests that public sector organizations can implement a coproduc-tion strategy to unlock the value of public sector personal information in a user-centric personal information ecosystem. More specifically, the paper ar-gues that the data subjects can be made more willing to consent to the pro-cessing (and possibly to the re-use) of personal information by involving them as coproducers in the processes through which public

Unlocking the value of Public Sector Personal Information through coproduction

Walter Castelnovo
2020-01-01

Abstract

In their day-to-day operations, public sector organizations collect and use huge amounts of information that if made available for re-use would con-tribute to economic growth. Much of this information directly or indirectly can lead to the identification of ‘natural persons’ and, as such, the personal data protection regulation applies to it. According to the General Data Pro-tection Regulation (GDPR) issued by the EU in 2016, unless it is regulated by a specific legislation, personal information can be processed only based on the data subject’s explicit consent. This raises the question of what strategies public organizations could implement to make the data subjects willing to allow the (possible) re-use of their personal information. By elaborating on evidences from the economics and the psychology of privacy literature, the paper suggests that public sector organizations can implement a coproduc-tion strategy to unlock the value of public sector personal information in a user-centric personal information ecosystem. More specifically, the paper ar-gues that the data subjects can be made more willing to consent to the pro-cessing (and possibly to the re-use) of personal information by involving them as coproducers in the processes through which public
2020
Springer Heidelberg
9783030236649
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2079260
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