221 | -- | 236 | Tomasz Janowski. Digital government evolution: From transformation to contextualization |
237 | -- | 245 | Albert Meijer, Victor Bekkers. A metatheory of e-government: Creating some order in a fragmented research field |
246 | -- | 252 | Tara Das. Measuring scholarly use of government information: An altmetrics analysis of federal statistics |
253 | -- | 260 | Sangki Jin, Cheong Moon Cho. Is ICT a new essential for national economic growth in an information society? |
261 | -- | 269 | Brian E. Whitacre, Sharon Strover, Roberto Gallardo. How much does broadband infrastructure matter? Decomposing the metro-non-metro adoption gap with the help of the National Broadband Map |
270 | -- | 278 | Sebastian Stier. Political determinants of e-government performance revisited: Comparing democracies and autocracies |
279 | -- | 286 | Antonio Cordella, Niccoló Tempini. E-government and organizational change: Reappraising the role of ICT and bureaucracy in public service delivery |
287 | -- | 298 | Tommaso Federici, Alessio Maria Braccini, Øystein Sæbø. 'Gentlemen, all aboard!' ICT and party politics: Reflections from a Mass-eParticipation experience |
299 | -- | 307 | Azi Lev-On, Nili Steinfeld. Local engagement online: Municipal Facebook pages as hubs of interaction |
308 | -- | 315 | Renee E. Sieber, Peter A. Johnson. Civic open data at a crossroads: Dominant models and current challenges |
316 | -- | 322 | Nik Thompson, Ravi Ravindran, Salvatore Nicosia. Government data does not mean data governance: Lessons learned from a public sector application audit |
323 | -- | 332 | Rui Pedro Lourenço. An analysis of open government portals: A perspective of transparency for accountability |
333 | -- | 341 | Staci M. Zavattaro, P. Edward French, Somya D. Mohanty. A sentiment analysis of U.S. local government tweets: The connection between tone and citizen involvement |
342 | -- | 352 | Philip Doty. U.S. homeland security and risk assessment |
353 | -- | 358 | Kyujin Jung, Han Woo Park. A semantic (TRIZ) network analysis of South Korea's "Open Public Data" policy |
359 | -- | 0 | Andrew Lopez. The persistence of innovation in government |
360 | -- | 361 | Stephanie Braunstein. DIGITALGOV.gov [website]. Administered by the General Services Administration's Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, 1800 F Street, Washington, DC 20405. Online material discussed in this review retrieved April 2015 from http: //www.digitalgov.gov/ |
360 | -- | 0 | Dana Jackson-Hardwick. Secrecy in the Sunshine Era: The promises and failures of U.S. open government laws |
361 | -- | 0 | Antonio Cordella. The Circulation of Agency in E-Justice: Interoperability and Infrastructure for European Transborder Judicial Proceedings, Francesco Contini, Giovan Francesco Lanzara (Eds.). Springer, New York and London (2014), 365 |
362 | -- | 0 | Aimée C. Quinn. Privacy in the age of big data: Recognizing threats, defending your rights, and protecting your familyForward by the Honorable Howard A. Schmidt, Theresa M. Payton, Theodore Claypoole. Rowan & Littlefield, Lanham, MD (2014) |