Why, with data increasingly important, available, valuable and cheap, are the data produced by the American government getting worse and costing more? State and local governments rely on population data from the US Census Bureau; prospective college students and their parents can check data from the National Center for Education Statistics; small businesses can draw on data about employment and wages from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But often the information they get is out of date or irrelevant, based on surveys—a form of information gathering notorious for low response rates. In A Data Manifesto, Julia Lane argues that bad data is bad for democracy. Her book is a wake-up call to America to fix its broken public data system.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
July 7, 2020 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780262359702
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780262359702
- File size: 336 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
July 20, 2020
Lane (coauthor, Where Are All the Good Jobs Going?), a professor of public policy at NYU, delivers a persuasive, evidence-based argument for building a new public data system in order to safeguard privacy and improve the government’s ability to implement policy initiatives. Though “public statistical institutions” such as the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics are currently “hamstrung by excessive legislative control, inertia, lack of incentives, ill-advised budget cuts, and the ‘tyranny of the established,’ ” Lane writes, the data they collect are essential to the functioning of democracy, and, as government institutions, they have more incentive to protect citizens’ data privacy than private corporations do. Her plan for reforming the fragmented and antiquated government systems that currently collect data on demographics, job rates, the impact of tax cuts, etc., centers on the creation of a National Lab for Community Data modeled after the 19th-century Land Grant college system and government-funded research centers such as Los Alamos National Lab, which would “bring together the contributions of researchers, policy makers, and government agencies... while responding to diverse interests.” Though Lane’s road map is geared more toward policy wonks than general interest readers, she writes in straightforward, accessible prose and makes a convincing case for reform. Policymakers will want to take note.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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