Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 27, Issue 4

312 -- 321Patrick Birkinshaw. Freedom of information and its impact in the United Kingdom
322 -- 328Vikki Gordon. National Security Directive declassification
329 -- 336Jonathan Lazar, Paul T. Jaeger, Anthony Adams, Anthony Angelozzi, John Manohar, James Marciniak, Justin Murphy, Pouria Norasteh, Charles Olsen, Evangelos Poneres, Tiffany Scott, Naresh Vaidya, James Walsh. Up in the air: Are airlines following the new DOT rules on equal pricing for people with disabilities when websites are inaccessible?
337 -- 345Elizabeth Shepherd, Alice Stevenson, Andrew Flinn. Information governance, records management, and freedom of information: A study of local government authorities in England
346 -- 351Weibing Xiao. China's limited push model of FOI legislation
352 -- 359Robert Hazell, Ben Worthy. Assessing the performance of freedom of information
360 -- 370Jeannine E. Relly, David Cuillier. A comparison of political, cultural, and economic indicators of access to information in Arab and non-Arab states
371 -- 376Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot. Transparency and technological change: Ensuring equal and sustained public access to government information
377 -- 383Sharon S. Dawes. Stewardship and usefulness: Policy principles for information-based transparency
384 -- 391Philip M. Napoli, Joe Karaganis. On making public policy with publicly available data: The case of U.S. communications policymaking
392 -- 400Tom McClean. Who pays the piper? The political economy of freedom of information
401 -- 413Patrice McDermott. Building open government
414 -- 422Harold C. Relyea. Across the Hill: The congressional research service and providing research for congress - A retrospective on origins
423 -- 430Isabel Gallego Álvarez, Luis Rodríguez Domínguez, Isabel María García Sánchez. Are determining factors of municipal E-government common to a worldwide municipal view? An intra-country comparison
431 -- 441Lihua Yang, G. Zhiyong Lan. Internet's impact on expert-citizen interactions in public policymaking - A meta analysis
442 -- 443Barbara Miller. Wiki Government: How Technology Can Make Government Better, Democracy Stronger, and Citizens More Powerful. Beth Simone Noveck. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2009. ($28.95)
442 -- 0Denise Arial Dorris. Free Government Information (FGI) Website. Retrieved June 15, 2010 from http: //freegovinfo.info/
443 -- 444Cynthia Thomes. The Privacy Advocates: Resisting the Spread of Surveillance. Colin J. Bennett. Cambridge, MA and London. The MIT Press, 2008, 259 pp. $28 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-262-02638-3
444 -- 445Bert Chapman. Spying Blind: The CIA, the FBI, and the Origins of 9/11, Amy B. Zegart. Princeton University Press, Princeton (2007)
445 -- 0Gretchen Gano. Managing Electronic Government Information in Libraries: Issues and Practices, Andrea M. Morrison (Ed.). American Library Association, Chicago (2009)

Volume 27, Issue 3

213 -- 219Jurjen Jansen, Sjoerd de Vries, Paul van Schaik. The Contextual Benchmark Method: Benchmarking e-Government services
220 -- 230Jungwoo Lee. 10 year retrospect on stage models of e-Government: A qualitative meta-synthesis
231 -- 237Laura McCarthy, Dave Yates. The use of cookies in Federal agency web sites: Privacy and recordkeeping issues
238 -- 244Ardion Beldad, Menno de Jong, Michaël F. Steehouder. Reading the least read? Indicators of users' intention to consult privacy statements on municipal websites
245 -- 253Scott Paquette, Paul T. Jaeger, Susan Copeland Wilson. Identifying the security risks associated with governmental use of cloud computing
254 -- 263Marieke Welle Donker-Kuijer, Menno de Jong, Leo Lentz. Usable guidelines for usable websites? An analysis of five e-government heuristics
264 -- 271John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger, Justin M. Grimes. Using ICTs to create a culture of transparency: E-government and social media as openness and anti-corruption tools for societies
272 -- 279Charles D. Bernholz. Standardized American Indians: The "Names of Indian tribes and bands" list from the Office of Indian Affairs
280 -- 291Lauren H. Mandel, Bradley Wade Bishop, Charles R. McClure, John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger. Broadband for public libraries: Importance, issues, and research needs
292 -- 304Chi-Shiou Lin, Kristin R. Eschenfelder. Librarian-initiated publications discovery: How do digital depository librarians discover and select web-based government publications for state digital depositories?
305 -- 306Edward O'Donnell. Web 2.0 and the Federal Government: A Webinar Sponsored by Center for American Progress, June 1, 2009, 12: 00 pm-1: 30 pm. http: //www.americanprogress.org/events/2009/06/web20.html
306 -- 0Emily Keller. Sunshine Week 2010 National Dialogue Webcast: Building Transparency. Sponsored by Free Government Information (FGI), March 19, 2010, 12-2 p.m. EST, http: //freegovinfo.info/
306 -- 308Debbie L. Rabina. Limiting Knowledge in a Democracy: A Social Research Conference at the New School. The New School, Feb 24-27, 2010. Conference Review, http: //www.newschool.edu/centers/socres/limitingknowledge/
308 -- 0Claudene Sproles. State of the eUnion: Government 2.0 and Onwards. John Gøtze, Christian Bering Pedersen (Eds.), Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2009, 332 pp. ISBN-13: 978-1449047290. Retrieved February 13, 2010, from http: //21gov.net.nmsrv.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/e-book.pdf. Managed by 21Gov.net, Copenhagen, Denmark
309 -- 0Karen Hogenboom. Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency, Archon Fung, Mary Graham, David Weil. Cambridge University Press, New York (2008)

Volume 27, Issue 2

113 -- 121Albert Meijer, Marcel Thaens. Alignment 2.0: Strategic use of new internet technologies in government
122 -- 133Marta Raus, Jianwei Liu, Alexander Kipp. Evaluating IT innovations in a business-to-government context: A framework and its applications
134 -- 140Dave Gelders, Marleen Brans, Jeroen Maesschalck, Nathalie Colsoul. Systematic evaluation of public participation projects: Analytical framework and application based on two Belgian neighborhood watch projects
141 -- 146Joanne M. Kuzma. Accessibility design issues with UK e-government sites
147 -- 160Dong-Hee Shin. Convergence and divergence: Policy making about the convergence of technology in Korea
161 -- 169Abebe Rorissa, Dawit Demissie. An analysis of African e-Government service websites
170 -- 176C. Nadine Wathen, Sandra McKeown. Can the government really help? Online information for women experiencing violence
177 -- 186Robin Gauld, Shaun Goldfinch, Simon Horsburgh. Do they want it? Do they use it? The 'Demand-Side' of e-Government in Australia and New Zealand
187 -- 195Jun Xia. Linking ICTs to rural development: China's rural information policy
196 -- 207Chun-Shuo Chen, Terrence A. Maxwell. Three decades of bilateral copyright negotiations: Mainland China and the United States
208 -- 0Ben Amata. Milestone Documents in American History: Exploring the Primary Sources that Shaped America, Paul Finkelman, Bruce A. Lesch (Eds.). Dallas, TX: Schlager Group (2008), ISBN: 9780979775802
208 -- 209Debbie L. Rabina. M-libraries: Libraries on the Move to Provide Virtual Access. Gill Needham, Mohamed Ally (Eds.). London: Facet Publishing, 2008, 287 pp. $125.00, ISBN 978-1-85604-648-0
209 -- 210Edward O'Donnell. Government Transparency 2.0: An Internet Evolution/InformationWeek Editorial WebinarSponsored by IBM Presenters Mary Hayes Weier, Editor at Large, Information Week and Monica McEwen, Regional Manager, Federal IBM, BI/PM (Formerly Cognos) (2009)
210 -- 212Roger Anderson. Space Warfare and Defense, a Historical Encyclopedia and Research Guide. Bert Chapman. Santa Barbara, CA.: ABC-Clio, 2008. xxx, 403 pp. $95.00, ISBN 1-59884-006-1 (cloth). Also available as an e-book, ISBN 1-59884-007-X
210 -- 0Bert Chapman. The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One, 346, David Kilcullen. Oxford University Press, New York (2009)

Volume 27, Issue 1

1 -- 8Jane Fedorowicz, Martin A. Dias. A decade of design in digital government research
9 -- 16John A. Shuler, Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot. Implications of harmonizing the future of the federal depository library program within e-government principles and policies
17 -- 25Enrico Ferro, Maddalena Sorrentino. Can intermunicipal collaboration help the diffusion of E-Government in peripheral areas? Evidence from Italy
26 -- 33Wade R. Rose, Gerald G. Grant. Critical issues pertaining to the planning and implementation of E-Government initiatives
34 -- 40Dave Gelders, Øyvind Ihlen. Minding the gap: Applying a service marketing model into government policy communications
41 -- 48Devendra Dilip Potnis. Measuring e-Governance as an innovation in the public sector
49 -- 56Jensen J. Zhao, Sherry Y. Zhao, Sherry Y. Zhao. Opportunities and threats: A security assessment of state e-government websites
57 -- 62Luis Fernando Ramos Simón, Iuliana Botezan. The path to information in the public domain: Official publications in Spain
63 -- 69Mohammad Sharifi, Amir Manian. The study of the success indicators for pre-implementation activities of Iran's E-Government development projects
70 -- 81Vassilis Meneklis, Christos Douligeris. Bridging theory and practice in e-government: A set of guidelines for architectural design
82 -- 88Antonio Cordella, Leslie P. Willcocks. Outsourcing, bureaucracy and public value: Reappraising the notion of the "contract state"
89 -- 97Nixon Muganda Ochara. Assessing irreversibility of an E-Government project in Kenya: Implication for governance
98 -- 107Marije L. Teerling, Willem Pieterson. Multichannel marketing: An experiment on guiding citizens to the electronic channels
108 -- 109Donna Burton. Department of Homeland Security Website. Administered by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Washington, DC 20528. Retrieved August 2009, from http: //www.dhs.gov/
109 -- 110Barbara Miller. Electronic Government, Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications. Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko, Ed. New York: Information Science Reference, 2008, 4, 780 pp. $1950.00, ISBN 978-1-59904-947-2. Online access only: $1850.00
109 -- 0Karen Hogenboom. Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, David Rothkopf (Ed.). Public Affairs, New York (2006)
110 -- 111Cynthia Thomes. Office of Scientific and Technical Information. Administered by OSTI, 1 Science.gov Way, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. Retrieved December 31, 2008, from http: //www.osti.gov
111 -- 112Claudene Sproles. USA.gov. Administered by The Office of Citizen Services and Communications, U.S. General Services Administration, 1800 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20405. Retrieved December 23, 2008, from http: //www.usa.gov/