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Keywords
(3)
Electronic Government
Empirical Evidence
Information and Communication Technology
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e-government... not e-governance... not e-democracy not now!: not ever?
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e-government... not e-governance... not e-democracy not now!: not ever?
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Donald F. Norris
,
Circle Baltimore
The argument that I offer in this paper, supported by literature and empirical evidence, is that e-government is just that --
electronic government
-- and little more. I define e-government as the delivery by alternate, electronic means of governmental information and services 24/7/365. It is government to citizen (G2C), government to government (G2B) and government to business (G2G). It is the outward face of the use of information and communications technologies (ICTs) by government to (hence the "2") deliver information and services. E-government occurs primarily, although not solely, via official governmental websites. E-government is not e-democracy or e-governance and does not appear to be heading in the direction of becoming either.
Conference:
International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance - ICEGOV
, pp. 339-346, 2010
DOI:
10.1145/1930321.1930391
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References
(24)
Privacy Strategies for Electronic Government
(
Citations: 32
)
Janine S. Hiller
E-Government in the Asia-pacific region
(
Citations: 20
)
Clay G. Wescott
Journal:
Asian Journal of Political Science
, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 1-24, 2001
Bowling Alone: the collapse and revival of American community
(
Citations: 4011
)
Robert D. Putnam
Published in 2000.
Reinventing Local Governments and the E-Government Initiative
(
Citations: 158
)
Alfred Tat-Kei Ho
Journal:
Public Administration Review - PUBLIC ADMIN REV
, vol. 62, no. 4, pp. 434-444, 2002
The Promise of All Things E? Expectations and Challenges of Emergent Electronic Government
(
Citations: 16
)
Jeffrey W. Seifert
,
R. Eric Petersen
Journal:
Perspectives on Global Development and Technology
, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 193-212, 2002