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The problem of state governability escalated in the context of digitalization of activity. The network society is transforming public administration in the direction of collaborative governance, i.e. citizen participation in the production and
enforcement of political decisions. In this regard, the modern concept of governability can no longer be subordinated to
either the scientific-administrative, or the economic, or republican paradigms of public administration. Ensuring security and
justice in the conflict of parties as the main functions of the state in the ideal of digitalization could be provided by algorithms
of appropriate technologies, taking into account the norms of pure procedural justice. Also, complex and uncertain network
environments have defined the nature of the new governability paradigm. A hypothesis is proposed and theoretically
grounded: participatory governability in public administration is a network effect that occurs in network structures characterized by a large number of participants, density of relationships, reciprocity, trust and belonging. It implies the principle of
collaboration between the state and society, the wide participation of citizens in public administration, in the development
and implementation of policies. Network technologies provide collaboration based on an institutional form of interaction that
is more effective than competitive representation. The digital blockchain algorithm provides the principles of pure procedural justice based on the rules of equality, trust, reciprocity and autonomy
Translated title of the contributionPARTICIPATORY GOVERNABILITY UNDER DIGITALIZATION CONDITIONS: NETWORK EFFECT AND INSTITUTIONS
Original languageRussian
Pages (from-to)43-49
Number of pages6
JournalКАСПИЙСКИЙ РЕГИОН: ПОЛИТИКА, ЭКОНОМИКА, КУЛЬТУРА
Issue number4(61)
StatePublished - 2019

    Scopus subject areas

  • Social Sciences(all)

    Research areas

  • collaborative governance, participatory governability, digitalization, networks, collaboration, network effects, blockchain, governability institutions, trust, eciprocity

ID: 51325258