Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 30, Issue Supplement-1

0 -- 0Tuo Zheng, Lei Zheng. Examining e-government enterprise architecture research in China: A systematic approach and research agenda
0 -- 0Adegboyega K. Ojo, Tomasz Janowski, Johanna Ekua Awotwi. Enabling development through governance and mobile technology
0 -- 0Marijn Janssen, Elsa Estevez. Lean government and platform-based governance - Doing more with less
0 -- 0Djoko Sigit Sayogo, Theresa A. Pardo. Exploring the determinants of scientific data sharing: Understanding the motivation to publish research data
0 -- 0Devender Maheshwari, Marijn Janssen. Measurement and benchmarking foundations: Providing support to organizations in their development and growth using dashboards
0 -- 0Elsa Estevez, Tomasz Janowski. Electronic Governance for Sustainable Development - Conceptual framework and state of research
0 -- 0Gianluca Misuraca, Cristiano Codagnone, Pierre Rossel. From Practice to Theory and back to Practice: Reflexivity in Measurement and Evaluation for Evidence-based Policy Making in the Information Society
0 -- 0Nitesh Bharosa, Marijn Janssen, Remco van Wijk, Niels de Winne, Haiko Van Der Voort, Joris Hulstijn, Yao-Hua Tan. Tapping into existing information flows: The transformation to compliance by design in business-to-government information exchange
0 -- 0Gabriel Puron Cid. Interdisciplinary application of structuration theory for e-government: A case study of an IT-enabled budget reform

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/

Volume 30, Issue 3

217 -- 225Björn Niehaves, Ralf Plattfaut, Jörg Becker. Business process management capabilities in local governments: A multi-method study
226 -- 240Robert E. Roth, Kevin S. Ross, Benjamin G. Finch, Wei Luo, Alan M. MacEachren. Spatiotemporal crime analysis in U.S. law enforcement agencies: Current practices and unmet needs
241 -- 256João Rosa, Claudio Teixeira, Joaquim Sousa Pinto. Risk factors in e-justice information systems
257 -- 266Morag Cherry, David McMenemy. Freedom of information and 'vexatious' requests - The case of Scottish local government
267 -- 276P. H. Hsieh, C.-S. Huang, David C. Yen. Assessing web services of emerging economies in an Eastern country - Taiwan's e-government
277 -- 288Ali Alawneh, Hasan Al-Refai, Khaldoun Batiha. Measuring user satisfaction from e-Government services: Lessons from Jordan
289 -- 299Jonathan Lazar, Brian Wentz, Abdulelah Almalhem, Alexander Catinella, Catalin Antonescu, Yeveniy Aynbinder, Michael Bands, Edward Bastress, Brandon Chan, Brian Chelden, Darin Feustel, Nabin Gautam, Whitney Gregg, Michael Heppding, Cory Householder, Alex Libby, Corey Melton, Jack Olgren, Loren Palestino, Morgan Ricks, Scott Rinebold, Matthew Seidel. A longitudinal study of state government homepage accessibility in Maryland and the role of web page templates for improving accessibility
300 -- 309Yeon-Tae Choi, Sangin Park. Understanding gender inequality in central e-government: A Korean case study
310 -- 317Myongho Yi, Sam Gyun Oh, Sunghun Kim. Comparison of social media use for the U.S. and the Korean governments

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

Volume 30, Issue 1

1 -- 9Christopher G. Reddick, Jeffrey Roy. Business perceptions and satisfaction with e-government: Findings from a Canadian survey
10 -- 22Karin Axelsson, Ulf Melin, Ida Lindgren. Public e-services for agency efficiency and citizen benefit - Findings from a stakeholder centered analysis
23 -- 32Brian Detlor, Maureen E. Hupfer, Umar Ruhi, Li Zhao. Information quality and community municipal portal use
33 -- 44Shin-Yuan Hung, Chia-Ming Chang, Shao-Rong Kuo. User acceptance of mobile e-government services: An empirical study
45 -- 55Chun Liu. Examining China's triple-network convergence plan: Regulatory challenges and policy recommendations
56 -- 63John T. Snead. Social media use in the U.S. Executive branch
64 -- 73Eduardo B. Fernández, David L. La Red, José Ignacio Peláez. A conceptual approach to secure electronic elections based on patterns
74 -- 86Adel M. Aladwani. A cross-cultural comparison of Kuwaiti and British citizens' views of e-government interface quality
87 -- 98Daniel Draper, Naomi Lederer. Analysis of Readex's Serial Set MARC records: Improving the data for the library catalog
99 -- 109Frank P. Lambert. Seeking electronic information from government resources: A comparative analysis of two communities' web searching of municipal government websites
110 -- 118Kurt DeMaagd, Han Ei Chew, Guanxiong Huang, M. Laeeq Khan, Akshaya Sreenivasan, Robert LaRose. The use of public computing facilities by library patrons: demography, motivations, and barriers
119 -- 0Emily Keller. Series: Research in Social Problems and Public Policy, volume 19, Government Secrecy, Susan Maret (Ed.). Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Bingley, UK (2011)
120 -- 0Ryan Shepard. Administered by e.Republic, 100 Blue Ravine Rd., Folsom, CA 95630
121 -- 122Katrina Stierholz. Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research (FRASER®). Administered by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Research Division. One Federal Reserve Bank Plaza, Broadway and Locust Streets, St. Louis, MO 63102. Retrieved April 2, 2012, from http: //fraser.stlouisfed.org/