Bentley, Caitlin M.Reilly, Katherine M. A.Alperin, Juan PabloRao, AnuradhaParekh, PriyaTraxler, JohnLing, RichardChaudhuri, BidishaSrinivasan, JanakiHoysala, OnkarMungai, PaulBelle, Jean-Paul VanSadoway, DavidShekhar, SatyarupaKendall, LinusDasgupta, PernabhaDearden, AndyWalton, MarionDensmore, MelissaZheng, YingqinStahl, BerndFaith, BeckySingh, Parminder JeetGurumurthy, AnitaChami, NandiniGamage, PiyumiRajapakse, ChiranthiGalpaya, HelaniMoshi, Goodiel C.Shao, Deo2024-03-262024-03-262020Bentley, C. M., Reilly, K. M., Alperin, J. P., Rao, A., Parekh, P., Traxler, J., ... & Shao, D. (2020). 5 Stewardship Regimes within Kenya's Open Data Initiative and Their Implications for Open Data for Development.DOI: https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/11480.001.0001https://repository.udom.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12661/4352Abstract. Full text chapter available at https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/11480.001.0001Reilly and Alperin (chapter 2, this volume) argue that there are a variety of ways that open data can be connected to meaningful use, depending on the actors and stewardship regime that manage the data. The concept of stewardship adds to the open data scholarship by emphasizing open data intermediation and asking whether powerful actors engage in intermediation strategies that align with the types of social values that citizens prioritize. Thus, identifying stewardship regimes involves uncovering and confronting actors' power and position, values and relationships, and how and why the needs and wants of others (who might benefit from open data) go unmet.enStewardship regimeOpen data scholarshipOpen dataOpen data intermediationIntermediation strategies5 stewardship regimes within Kenya’s open data initiative and their implications for open data for developmentBook chapter