Taking Peer-to-Peer Sharing and Collaborative Consumption onto the Next Level – New Opportunities and Challenges for E-GovernmentOpen Access

Chasin F, Scholta H

Research article in edited proceedings (conference) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Rapid advances in IT combined with increasing awareness for environmental side-effects of modern economies are causing a shift in the consumer behavior towards new forms of consumption. Privateindividualsincreasingly become both providers and consumers of services. Web 2.0 enables peer-to-peer transactions between consumers creating a new consumption space with hundreds of mediator platforms. While the new legally questionable market is typically seen as a challenge by governments, the opportunities for governments to participate in peer-to-peer (P2P) sharing and collaborative consumption services (SCCS) for their citizens are hardly exploredin academia.In contrast, first pioneer governments such as the citiesof Seoul and San Francisco have already developed strategies to support the development of P2P SCCS for their citizens.In this work, we advocate for extending the function scope of e-government by including P2P SCCS into its portfolio. To support our reasoningand in order to systematically address the problem area emerging from the combination of e-government and P2P SCCS, we review and synthesize e-government models and relate them to the P2P SCCS phenomenon. Our results reveal what constitutes a research agenda for utilizing potentials of P2P SCCS in the context of e-government research and practice.

Details about the publication

StatusPublished
Release year2015
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Conference23rd European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2015), Münster, Germany
KeywordsE-Government; Peer-to-Peer Sharing; Sharing Services; Collaborative Consumption

Authors from the University of Münster

Chasin, Friedrich
Scholta, Hendrik

Projects the publication originates from

Duration: 01/12/2013 - 28/02/2015 | 1st Funding period
Funded by: Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space
Type of project: Participation in federally funded joint project