Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 30, Issue 2

123 -- 130Ines Mergel. Social media adoption and resulting tactics in the U.S. federal government
131 -- 140Sarah Shik Lamdan. Why library cards offer more privacy rights than proof of citizenship: Librarian ethics and Freedom of Information Act requestor policies
141 -- 153Mete Yildiz, Aysegül Saylam. E-government discourses: An inductive analysis
154 -- 162Ann-Sofie Hellberg, Åke Grönlund. Conflicts in implementing interoperability: Re-operationalizing basic values
163 -- 172Ida Lindgren, Gabriella Jansson. Electronic services in the public sector: A conceptual framework
173 -- 181Xian Gao, Yingfa Song, Xiaorui Zhu. Integration and coordination: Advancing China's fragmented e-government to holistic governance
182 -- 193Gohar Feroz Khan, Han Woo Park. The e-government research domain: A triple helix network analysis of collaboration at the regional, country, and institutional levels
194 -- 203Dong-Hee Shin. User centric cloud service model in public sectors: Policy implications of cloud services
204 -- 210Stuart Shapiro. The Paperwork Reduction Act: Benefits, costs and directions for reform
211 -- 212Amanda Wakaruk. Government Information Management in the 21st Century: International Perspectives, Peggy Garvin (Ed.). Ashgate Publishing, Farnham, Surrey, England; Burlington, VT (2011), ISBN: 9781409402060
211 -- 0Stacey Chambers. The National Security Archive. The George Washington University, Suite 701, Gelman Library, 2130 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037, Retrieved November 1, 2012, from http: //www.nsarchive.org
213 -- 0Daniel Schuman. The Sunlight Foundation [Website]. The Sunlight Foundation, 1818 N Street NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036. Retrieved December 13, 2012 from http: //sunlightfoundation.com/
214 -- 216Gary D. Bass. Connecting Democracy: Online Consultation and the Flow of Political Communication, Stephen Coleman, Peter M. Shane (Eds.). The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (December 2011), ISBN: 9780262516464