Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 34, Issue 4

567 -- 577Fredrik Karlsson, Magnus Frostenson, Frans Prenkert, Ella Kolkowska, Sven Helin. Inter-organisational information sharing in the public sector: A longitudinal case study on the reshaping of success factors
578 -- 590Gustaf Juell-Skielse, Carl-Mikael Lönn, Tero Päivärinta. Modes of collaboration and expected benefits of inter-organizational E-government initiatives: A multi-case study
591 -- 600Habin Lee, Aggeliki Tsohou, Youngseok Choi. Embedding persuasive features into policy issues: Implications to designing public participation processes
601 -- 612Panos Panagiotopoulos, Frances Bowen, Phillip Brooker. The value of social media data: Integrating crowd capabilities in evidence-based policy
613 -- 626Ussama Yaqub, Soon Ae Chun, Vijayalakshmi Atluri, Jaideep Vaidya. Analysis of political discourse on twitter in the context of the 2016 US presidential elections
627 -- 634Xian Gao, Jooho Lee. E-government services and social media adoption: Experience of small local governments in Nebraska state
635 -- 645Mila Gascó, Petra Saskia Bayerl, Sebastian Denef, Babak Akhgar. What do citizens communicate about during crises? Analyzing twitter use during the 2011 UK riots
646 -- 657Jyoti Choudrie, Efpraxia D. Zamani, Emeka Umeoji, Adebola Emmanuel. Implementing E-government in Lagos State: Understanding the impact of cultural perceptions and working practices
658 -- 679Rajesh Sharma, Rajhans Mishra. Investigating the role of intermediaries in adoption of public access outlets for delivery of e-Government services in developing countries: An empirical study

Volume 34, Issue 3

355 -- 364Svein Ølnes, Jolien Ubacht, Marijn Janssen. Blockchain in government: Benefits and implications of distributed ledger technology for information sharing
365 -- 378Lieselot Danneels, Stijn Viaene, Joachim Van den Bergh. Open data platforms: Discussing alternative knowledge epistemologies
379 -- 387Alex Luscombe, Kevin Walby. Theorizing freedom of information: The live archive, obfuscation, and actor-network theory
388 -- 395A. Jay Wagner. Essential or extravagant: Considering FOIA budgets, costs and fees
396 -- 405Bo Fan, Yupan Zhao. The moderating effect of external pressure on the relationship between internal organizational factors and the quality of open government data
406 -- 420Elin Uppström, Carl-Mikael Lönn. Explaining value co-creation and co-destruction in e-government using boundary object theory
421 -- 433Eva-Maria Trüdinger, Leonie C. Steckermeier. Trusting and controlling? Political trust, information and acceptance of surveillance policies: The case of Germany
434 -- 456Yvon van den Boer, Willem Pieterson, Rex Arendsen, Jan van Dijk. Towards a model of source and channel choices in business-to-government service interactions: A structural equation modeling approach
457 -- 469Lisa Schmidthuber, Dennis Hilgers, Thomas Gegenhuber, Stefan Etzelstorfer. The emergence of local open government: Determinants of citizen participation in online service reporting
470 -- 480Erna Ruijer, Stephan Grimmelikhuijsen, Michael J. Hogan, Sem Enzerink, Adegboyega Ojo, Albert Meijer. Connecting societal issues, users and data. Scenario-based design of open data platforms
481 -- 495Yikai Liang, Guijie Qi, Kangning Wei, Jiali Chen. Exploring the determinant and influence mechanism of e-Government cloud adoption in government agencies in China
496 -- 510Rony Medaglia, Lei Zheng. Mapping government social media research and moving it forward: A framework and a research agenda
511 -- 523Fernando Mendez, Uwe Serdült. What drives fidelity to internet voting? Evidence from the roll-out of internet voting in Switzerland
524 -- 532Tapio Vepsäläinen, Hongxiu Li, Reima Suomi. Facebook likes and public opinion: Predicting the 2015 Finnish parliamentary elections
533 -- 544Rony Medaglia, Demi Zhu. Public deliberation on government-managed social media: A study on Weibo users in China
545 -- 555Laura Alcaide-Muñoz, Manuel Pedro Rodríguez Bolívar, Manuel J. Cobo, Enrique Herrera-Viedma. Analysing the scientific evolution of e-Government using a science mapping approach
556 -- 565Hsiaoping Yeh. The effects of successful ICT-based smart city services: From citizens' perspectives
566 -- 0Wolfgang Ebbers, Marloes G. M. Jansen, A. J. A. M. van Deursen. Corrigendum to "Impact of the digital divide on e-government: Expanding from channel choice to channel usage" [Gov. Inf. Q. 33(4) 685-692]

Volume 34, Issue 2

167 -- 182A. Brown, Jerry Fishenden, M. Thompson, W. Venters. Appraising the impact and role of platform models and Government as a Platform (GaaP) in UK Government public service reform: Towards a Platform Assessment Framework (PAF)
183 -- 198Kumju Hwang, Myeonggil Choi. Effects of innovation-supportive culture and organizational citizenship behavior on e-government information system security stemming from mimetic isomorphism
199 -- 210Viswanath Venkatesh, Hartmut Hoehle, Ruba Aljafari. A usability study of the obamacare website: Evaluation and recommendations
211 -- 230Yogesh Kumar Dwivedi, Nripendra P. Rana, Marijn Janssen, Banita Lal, Michael D. Williams, Marc Clement. An empirical validation of a unified model of electronic government adoption (UMEGA)
231 -- 243Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Christopher G. Reddick. A longitudinal cross-sector analysis of open data portal service capability: The case of Australian local governments
244 -- 255Eric Afful-Dadzie, Anthony Afful-Dadzie. Open Government Data in Africa: A preference elicitation analysis of media practitioners
256 -- 269Xiaohua Zhu. The failure of an early episode in the open government data movement: A historical case study
270 -- 282Aizhan Tursunbayeva, Massimo Franco, Claudia Pagliari. Use of social media for e-Government in the public health sector: A systematic review of published studies
283 -- 295Sandra Cohen, Xenia J. Mamakou, Sotirios Karatzimas. IT-enhanced popular reports: Analyzing citizen preferences
296 -- 306Hui-Na Chua, Siew Fan Wong, Younghoon Chang, Christian Fernando Libaque Saenz. Unveiling the coverage patterns of newspapers on the personal data protection act
307 -- 316Kyounghee Hazel Kwon, H. Raghav Rao. Cyber-rumor sharing under a homeland security threat in the context of government Internet surveillance: The case of South-North Korea conflict
317 -- 328Aderonke A. Oni, Samuel Oni, Victor Mbarika, Charles K. Ayo. Empirical study of user acceptance of online political participation: Integrating Civic Voluntarism Model and Theory of Reasoned Action
329 -- 339Olaseni Muritala Okunola, Jennifer Rowley, Frances Johnson. The multi-dimensional digital divide: Perspectives from an e-government portal in Nigeria
340 -- 353Hyeri Choi, Min-Jae Park, Jae Jeung Rho. Two-dimensional approach to governmental excellence for human development in developing countries: Combining policies and institutions with e-government

Volume 34, Issue 1

1 -- 7Hans de Bruijn, Marijn Janssen. Building Cybersecurity Awareness: The need for evidence-based framing strategies
8 -- 15Maureen Henninger. Government information: Literacies, behaviours and practices
16 -- 25Endrit Kromidha, José-Rodrigo Córdoba-Pachón. Discursive Institutionalism for reconciling change and stability in digital innovation public sector projects for development
26 -- 36Vicente Pina, Lourdes Torres, Sonia Royo. Comparing online with offline citizen engagement for climate change: Findings from Austria, Germany and Spain
37 -- 44George A. Barnett, Weiai Wayne Xu, Jianxun Chu, Ke Jiang, Catherine Huh, Ji Young Park, Han Woo Park. Measuring international relations in social media conversations
45 -- 52Erna Ruijer, Stephan Grimmelikhuijsen, Albert Meijer. Open data for democracy: Developing a theoretical framework for open data use
53 -- 61Jeffrey Thorsby, Genie N. L. Stowers, Kristen Wolslegel, Ellie Tumbuan. Understanding the content and features of open data portals in American cities
62 -- 74Mary K. Feeney, Adrian Brown. Are small cities online? Content, ranking, and variation of U.S. municipal websites
75 -- 83Kaja J. Fietkiewicz, Agnes Mainka, Wolfgang G. Stock. eGovernment in cities of the knowledge society. An empirical investigation of Smart Cities' governmental websites
84 -- 89Atreyi Kankanhalli, Anneke Zuiderwijk, Giri Kumar Tayi. Open innovation in the public sector: A research agenda
90 -- 98Mila Gascó. Living labs: Implementing open innovation in the public sector
99 -- 109Euripidis Loukis, Yannis Charalabidis, Aggeliki Androutsopoulou. Promoting open innovation in the public sector through social media monitoring
110 -- 125Christopher G. Reddick, Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Adegboyega Ojo. A social media text analytics framework for double-loop learning for citizen-centric public services: A case study of a local government Facebook use
126 -- 133Nan Zhang, Xuejiao Zhao, Zhongwen Zhang, Qingguo Meng, Haibo Tan. What factors drive open innovation in China's public sector? A case study of official document exchange via microblogging (ODEM) in Haining
134 -- 139Suvi Konsti-Laakso. Stolen snow shovels and good ideas: The search for and generation of local knowledge in the social media community
140 -- 152Vasiliki Baka. Co-creating an open platform at the local governance level: How openness is enacted in Zambia
153 -- 166Dimitri Gagliardi, Laura Schina, Marco Lucio Sarcinella, Giovanna Mangialardi, Francesco Niglia, Angelo Corallo. Information and communication technologies and public participation: interactive maps and value added for citizens