Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 28, Issue 2

135 -- 136Danielle Brian, Patrice McDermott, Jake Weins. WikiLeaks is a wake-up call for openness
137 -- 147Frank Bannister, Regina Connolly. Trust and transformational government: A proposed framework for research
148 -- 154Rowena Cullen, Laura Sommer. Participatory democracy and the value of online community networks: An exploration of online and offline communities engaged in civil society and political activity
155 -- 163Daeho Kim. New regulatory institution for the convergence of broadcasting and telecommunications: A Korean case
164 -- 175Tung-Mou Yang, Terrence A. Maxwell. Information-sharing in public organizations: A literature review of interpersonal, intra-organizational and inter-organizational success factors
176 -- 187Gonzalo Valdes, Mauricio Solar, Hernán Astudillo, Marcelo Iribarren, Gastón Concha, Marcello Visconti. Conception, development and implementation of an e-Government maturity model in public agencies
188 -- 199Agustí Cerrillo-i-Martínez. The regulation of diffusion of public sector information via electronic means: Lessons from the Spanish regulation
200 -- 210Muhammad Mustafa Kamal, Vishanth Weerakkody, Zahir Irani. Analyzing the role of stakeholders in the adoption of technology integration solutions in UK local government: An exploratory study
211 -- 221Godwin Kaisara, Shaun Pather. The e-Government evaluation challenge: A South African Batho Pele-aligned service quality approach
222 -- 230Jooho Lee, Hyun Joon Kim, Michael J. Ahn. The willingness of e-Government service adoption by business users: The role of offline service quality and trust in technology
231 -- 238Remi Chandran, Padmanabhan Krishnan, Khoi Nguyen. Wildlife Enforcement Monitoring System (WEMS): A solution to support compliance of Multilateral Environmental Agreements
239 -- 251Dimitrios Zissis, Dimitrios Lekkas. Securing e-Government and e-Voting with an open cloud computing architecture
252 -- 261Tonny J. Oyana. Exploring geographic disparities in broadband access and use in rural southern Illinois: Who's being left behind?
262 -- 270Kathleen Hale, Ramona S. McNeal. Technology, politics, and e-commerce: Internet sales tax and interstate cooperation
271 -- 279Fengyi Lin, Seedy S. Fofanah, Deron Liang. Assessing citizen adoption of e-Government initiatives in Gambia: A validation of the technology acceptance model in information systems success
280 -- 289Siddhartha Menon. The evolution of the policy objectives of South Korea's Broadband Convergence Network from 2004 to 2007
290 -- 291Aimée C. Quinn. Geographic Information Science and Public Participation. Laxmi Ramasubramanian. Advances in Geographic Information Science. Shivannand Balram and Suzana Dragicevic (Eds.). Berlin: Springer, 2010, 172 p. $140.00, ISBN: 978-3-540-75400-8
290 -- 0Emily Keller. Blogging the Political: Politics and Participation in a Networked Society. Antoinette Pole. New York: Routledge, 2010, 176 pp. $29.95 (paperback), ISBN 0415963427
291 -- 292Julia Proctor. Lobbying and Policy Change: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Why. Frank R. Baumgartner, Jeffrey M. Berry, Marie Hojnacki, David C. Kimball, Beth L. Leech. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2009, 360 pp. $66.00 (cloth), ISBN: 9780226039442
292 -- 0Edward O'Donnell. FedWorld.Gov. Administered by the National Technical Information Service, U.S. Department of Commerce, Alexandria, VA, 22312. Retrieved September 30, 2010, from http: //www.fedworld.gov/index.html
292 -- 293Karen Hogenboom. Change of State: Information, Policy and Power. Sharon Braman. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006, 545 pp. $20.00 (paperback), ISBN-13 978-0-262-02597-3. Reprint edition (September 2009), ISBN-10 0-262-51324-2