E-Government: Information, Technology, and Transformation

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A01=Hans J Schnoll
administration
architecture
Author_Hans J Schnoll
Business Process
Category=KC
Category=KJMK
Category=KJMV5
civic engagement strategies
Cost Benefit
cross-agency interoperability models
Digital Government
digital government services
E-government Agencies
E-government Applications
E-government Research
EC
EG
enterprise
Enterprise Architecture
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
european
framework
ICT Artifact
information integration
interoperability
Interoperability Frameworks
Interoperability Infrastructure
IOS
IOS Press
Managerial Web Site Effectiveness
online transparency
privacy in digital governance
public
public administration
research
semantic
Semantic Interoperability
Semantic Technologies
Semantic Web
Smart Card Reader
Ta Te
technologies
Transformative E-government
Vice Versa
Web Site Effectiveness
Wireless Access Points

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765619891
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 May 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book presents a citizen-centric perspective of the dual components of e-government and e-governance. E-government> refers to the practice of online public reporting by government to citizens, and to service delivery via the Internet. E-governance represents the initiatives for citizens to participate and provide their opinion on government websites.

This volume in the Public Solutions Handbook Series focuses on various e-government initiatives from the United States and abroad, and will help guide public service practitioners in their transformation to e-government. The book provides important recommendations and suggestions oriented towards practitioners, and makes a significant contribution to e-government by showcasing successful models and highlighting the lessons learned in the implementation processes.

Chapter coverage includes:

  • Online fiscal transparency
  • Performance reporting
  • Improving citizen participation
  • Privacy issues in e-governance
  • Internet voting
  • E-government at the local level
Hans Jochen Scholl is an associate professor at the University of Washington’s Information School. He teaches and conducts research on information management, process change, and organizational transformation in government and other organizations. He has studied the strategies, motives, and focal areas of business and process change in digital government projects as well as the current practices employed in such projects. His special interests include open government, transparency, integration, interoperability, organizational transformation, and strategic choices in mobile technology diffusion in digital government. His work has appeared in the International Journal of Public Administration, Transforming Government, Electronic Government, International Journal of Electronic Government Research, Government Information Quarterly, Action Research, and the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science. He is the principal investigator of the NSF-funded Fully Mobile City Government research project. He chairs the Electronic Government Track at the Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS) and serves as a member of the organizing committee of the IFIP EGOVconference. He is the president of the Digital Govern[1]ment Society of North America and the vice chair of the IFIP TC 8.5 Working Group (Information Systems in Public Administration).

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