Quantitative Evaluation of China's Information Accessibility Policies and Revelation Study
Information accessibility policies play an important role in promoting the comprehensive realization of the strategic goal of China's information-based power,and the quantitative evaluation of China's information ac-cessibility policies can provide decision-making support for the optimization and improvement of related policies.This paper takes the information accessibility policies as the research object,integrates the text mining results and existing models to establish the information accessibility PMC index model,and then quantitatively evaluates and analyzes the eight sample policies in China.The study shows that the current in-formation accessibility policies of the central and local governments in China have a high degree of consis-tency in terms of policy issuers,regulatory objects,policy focuses,and policy nature;the overall layout of in-formation accessibility policies is reasonable,but there are still common problems of weak deployment of policy effectiveness,regulatory objects,and coverage groups;the central policy is deployed in the absence of policy domains and policy focuses;the local governments have a lack of policy evaluation and policy mea-sures;and the local governments have a lack of policy evaluation and policy measures;the central policy is deployed in the lack of policy areas and policy focuses;and the local governments have a lack of policy eval-uation and policy measures.There is a gap between the central government and the central policy in terms of policy evaluation and policy measures.It is suggested that China's information accessibility policy should be subsequently optimized by refining the content of short-term and medium-term policies,broadening the scope of policy subjects,and balancing the distribution of policy attention among information disadvantaged groups;in addition,the central policy should further enrich the vision of policy domains and policy priori-ties,and local governments need to enhance flexibility in the dimensions of policy evaluation and policy measures.
information accessibilitypolicy quantificationPMC indexpolicy evaluationpolicy implications