Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 30, Issue 4

319 -- 326J. Ignacio Criado, Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán, José Ramón Gil-García. Government innovation through social media
327 -- 334Ines Mergel. A framework for interpreting social media interactions in the public sector
335 -- 342Victor Bekkers, Arthur R. Edwards, Dennis de Kool. Social media monitoring: Responsive governance in the shadow of surveillance?
343 -- 350Albert Meijer, Marcel Thaens. Social media strategies: Understanding the differences between North American police departments
351 -- 358Karen Mossberger, Yonghong Wu, Jared Crawford. Connecting citizens and local governments? Social media and interactivity in major U.S. cities
359 -- 368Enrico Ferro, Euripidis N. Loukis, Yannis Charalabidis, Michele Osella. Policy making 2.0: From theory to practice
369 -- 376Lei Zheng. Social media in Chinese government: Drivers, challenges and capabilities
377 -- 386Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Hans Jochen Scholl, Uuf Brajawidagda. Tsunami early warnings via Twitter in government: Net-savvy citizens' co-production of time-critical public information services
387 -- 396Sara Hofmann, Daniel Beverungen, Michael Räckers, Jörg Becker. What makes local governments' online communications successful? Insights from a multi-method analysis of Facebook
397 -- 405Gustavo Henrique Maultasch Oliveira, Eric W. Welch. Social media use in local government: Linkage of technology, task, and organizational context
406 -- 416Hisham M. E. Abdelsalam, Christopher G. Reddick, Sara Gamal, Abdoulrahman Al-shaar. Social media in Egyptian government websites: Presence, usage, and effectiveness
417 -- 425Mehmet Zahid Sobaci, Naci Karkin. The use of twitter by mayors in Turkey: Tweets for better public services?
426 -- 434Dennis Linders. Towards open development: Leveraging open data to improve the planning and coordination of international aid
435 -- 440Rhoda C. Joseph. A structured analysis of e-government studies: Trends and opportunities
441 -- 449Mairéad de Róiste. Bringing in the users: The role for usability evaluation in eGovernment
450 -- 463Chuanfu Chen, Ping Wang, Yaqi Liu, Gang Wu, Pei Wang. Impacts of government website information on social sciences and humanities in China: A citation analysis
464 -- 472Sounman Hong. Who benefits from Twitter? Social media and political competition in the U.S. House of Representatives
473 -- 485Luca Urciuoli, Juha Hintsa, Juha Ahokas. Drivers and barriers affecting usage of e-Customs - A global survey with customs administrations using multivariate analysis techniques
486 -- 497Tony Dwi Susanto, Robert Goodwin. User acceptance of SMS-based e-government services: Differences between adopters and non-adopters
498 -- 507Christopher G. Reddick, Donald F. Norris. Social media adoption at the American grass roots: Web 2.0 or 1.5?
508 -- 513Maxat Kassen. A promising phenomenon of open data: A case study of the Chicago open data project
514 -- 524Eun-A. Park, Krishna Jayakar. Implementation of BTOP funding for public computing centers: Goal consensus and project performance
525 -- 526Debbie L. Rabina. Scientific Council for Government Policy, Corien Prins, Dennis Broeders, Henk Griffioen, Anne-Greet Keizer, Esther Keymolen. Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam (2011)
525 -- 0Claudene Sproles. The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, 1101 K Street NW, Suite 610, Washington, DC 20005
526 -- 527Steve Beleu. American FactFinder: Revising an Online Tool for Different Users. Administered by the U.S. Census Bureau, 4600 Silver Hill Road, Washington, DC 20233. Retrieved May 22, 2013 from http: //factfinder2.census.gov/ (http: //www.census.gov/ - Data - American FactFinder)
528 -- 0John Carlo Bertot. Bringing voice to the next generation information professional
529 -- 530Jackie Sauter Zajac. Administered by the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, 1700 G Street, NW, Washington, DC 20552
530 -- 531Kimberly D. White. Voting and Elections: A USA.gov Section Review. Administered by the U.S. General Services Administration, Federal Citizen Information Center, One Constitution Square, 1275 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20417. Retrieved April 23, 2013, from http: //www.usa.gov/
531 -- 532Molly Schwartz. IRS.gov. Administered by the Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20224. Retrieved October 11, 2013, from http: //www.irs.gov/
532 -- 533Jennifer Elkins, Diane Travis. FEMA.gov: A Review of Usability. The Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 500 C Street SW, Washington, DC 20472. Retrieved June 27, 2013, from http: //www.fema.gov/