Data

General Issues
Education
Governance & Political Institutions
Location
Russia
Scope of Influence
National
Ongoing
No
Total Number of Participants
512
Facilitators
No
Face-to-Face, Online, or Both
Online
Decision Methods
Voting
If Voting
Preferential Voting
Communication of Insights & Outcomes
New Media

CASE

Law-making 2.0 by Wikivote (Russia)

June 18, 2017 yarmakhov
December 26, 2011 yarmakhov
General Issues
Education
Governance & Political Institutions
Location
Russia
Scope of Influence
National
Ongoing
No
Total Number of Participants
512
Facilitators
No
Face-to-Face, Online, or Both
Online
Decision Methods
Voting
If Voting
Preferential Voting
Communication of Insights & Outcomes
New Media

Note: This article is in need of assistance with editing and content. Please help us complete it.

Problems and Purpose

In 2010, the Russian Ministry of Education asked Wikivote to develop a crowdsource platform for evaluating and editing the draft of the new Law on Education. The goals were to include Russian experts, teachers, and parents in a detailed analysis of the Law's concepts and items and solicit ideas for improving the Law.

History

In April 2010 Wikivote was approached by the Russian Ministry of Education with a request to develop a crowdsourcing platform for evaluating and editing the draft for the new Law on Education. For testing the model the chapter "General education" was used. Wikivote's goal was to invite Russian experts, teachers and parents to an in-depth analysis of the Law, evaluating and discussing its overall concept and items, soliciting ideas for improving statements of the law and making new suggestions.
The Law on Education is a major discussion issue in the Russian political life. The quality of education in Russia is one of the major concerns as the vast majority of Russian families have K-12 students. Most discussed issues, such as mandatory graduation testing, religious education and deteriorating quality of public school education are highly debated.

Originating Entities and Funding

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Participant Recruitment and Selection

Wikivote assumed that the community for discussing the subject is very broad and set no limitations on age, affiliation or status of participants. Their approach to lawmaking is quite different from the existing practice, in which access to creating and making amendments to laws is granted only to a very limited group of "experts", whose expertise is mainly based only to their proximity to the governing bodies. This corresponds with previous research which showed that maximum results are received in crowdsourcing campaigns where certain level of the participants' knowledge of the field is combined with their diversity.

Potential participants were invited using expert mailing lists and social networks. The organizers did not try to solicit a vast number of potential contributors; a right balance between the number, expertise and diversity of the "crowd" was essential. During the testing period in May - August 2010 512 users joined the community and participated in discussing and evaluating the Law. This number proved to be quite adequate for the targeted goals, as larger number of participants could negatively affect the service performance.

Methods and Tools Used

Crowdsourcing

Deliberation, Decisions, and Public Interaction

The text of the draft Law was decomposed into 11 articles and 71 items. Each item became a subject to discussion and improvement. Each item of the Law was posted on the site as a separate page. Upon registration users could make a vote in favor or against the draft, comment on it or suggest their own versions, which was done as a result of saving a previously edited version of an item under the user's name. User created item versions were also commented and evaluated.

Influence, Outcomes, and Effects Analysis and Criticism Secondary Sources External Links

https://blog.okfn.org/2012/04/04/the-public-examination-of-draft-laws-la...

Notes