Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 28, Issue 4

439 -- 445Kim Normann Andersen, Rony Medaglia, Ravi Vatrapu, Helle Zinner Henriksen, Robin Gauld. The forgotten promise of e-government maturity: Assessing responsiveness in the digital public sector
446 -- 456Katleen Janssen. The influence of the PSI directive on open government data: An overview of recent developments
457 -- 465Victor Bekkers, Rebecca Moody. Visual events and electronic government: What do pictures mean in digital government for citizen relations?
466 -- 473Ahmad A. Kardan, Ayoob Sadeghiani. Is e-government a way to e-democracy?: A longitudinal study of the Iranian situation
474 -- 483Michele Bush Kimball. Mandated state-level open government training programs
484 -- 490Daihua Xie Yu, Bambang Parmanto. U.S. state government websites demonstrate better in terms of accessibility compared to federal government and commercial websites
491 -- 502Stacy Huey-Pyng Shyu, Jen-Hung Huang. Elucidating usage of e-government learning: A perspective of the extended technology acceptance model
503 -- 513Sevgi Ozkan, Irfan Emrah Kanat. e-Government adoption model based on theory of planned behavior: Empirical validation
514 -- 521Yon Soo Lim, Han Woo Park. How do congressional members appear on the web? Tracking the web visibility of South Korean politicians
522 -- 532Anteneh Ayanso, Dipanjan Chatterjee, Danny I. Cho. E-Government readiness index: A methodology and analysis
533 -- 541Kenneth J. Knapp, Gary D. Denney, Mark E. Barner. Key issues in data center security: An investigation of government audit reports
542 -- 552Wilhelm Peekhaus. Biowatch South Africa and the challenges in enforcing its constitutional right to access to information
553 -- 555August A. Imholtz Jr.. GPO Celebrates Its 150th Anniversary: Keeping America Informed. U.S. Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol Street Northwest, Washington D.C., 20401-0003. Visited August 3, 2011
553 -- 0Debbie L. Rabina. Access Controlled: The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace, Ronald Deibert, John Palfrey, Rafal Rohozinski, Jonathan Zittrain (Eds.). MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (2010), ISBN: 978-0-262-51435-4
555 -- 0Claudene Sproles. Office of Government Information Services (OGIS). Administered by The National Archives and Records Administration, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001. Retrieved March 8, 2011, from http: //www.archives.gov/ogis/
555 -- 556Alireza Isfandyari Moghaddam. Digital Government: E-government Research, Case Studies, and Implementation (Integrated Series in Information Systems), Hsinchun Chen, Lawrence Brandt, Valerie Gregg, Roland Traunmüller, Sharon Dawes, Eduard Hovy, Ann Macintosh, Catherine A. Larson (Eds.). Springer Science + Business Media, LLC, New York (2008)
556 -- 557Barbara Miller. Transparency and Secrecy: A Reader Linking Literature and Contemporary Debate. Suzanne J. Piotrowski, Suzanne J. Piotrowski (Ed.). Lexington Books, Lanham, Boulder (2010), ISBN: 978-0-7391-2751-3
557 -- 558Julia Proctor. Freedom of Information and the Developing World: The Citizen, the State, and the Models of Openness. Colin Darch and Peter G. Underwood. Oxford: Chandos Publishing, 2010, 317 pp. $55.00 (paper), ISBN 9781843341475