Journal: IJITM

Volume 6, Issue 2/3/4

125 -- 137Feng Li. What is e-business and does it still matter?
138 -- 147Ailsa Kolsaker. Understanding e-government (G2C) in the knowledge society
148 -- 169Jeffrey Roy. Electronic service delivery in a multi-channel public sector: an assessment of the government of Canada
170 -- 187Victor P. Lane, James Snaith, Daniel Lane. E-health: essential and eagerly awaited?
188 -- 208Thomas M. Connolly, Mark Stansfield. From e-learning to games-based e-learning: using interactive technologies in teaching an IS course
209 -- 231Pin Luarn, Max I. Jen Chen, Peter Kai Yang Lo. Critical success factors in introducing e-learning
232 -- 249Steve McRobb, Bernd Carsten Stahl. Privacy as a shared feature of the e-phenomenon: a comparison of privacy policies in e-government, e-commerce and e-teaching
250 -- 270Sid Ghosh, Martijn Bertisen. The phenomenon of e-business networking: a critical review
271 -- 285Yulin Fang, Linying Dong. Going virtual in the e-world an environment-adaptation perspective on organisational virtuality
286 -- 298Alexis Barlow, Feng Li. E-supply chains: understanding current and future opportunities and barriers
299 -- 328Hemant K. Sabat. Emerging business models and trends in the mobile wireless industry
329 -- 342P. Berthon, C. B. Williams. Stages of e-democracy: towards an open-source political model
343 -- 361Savanid Vatanasakdakul, John D Ambra. A conceptual model for e-commerce adoption in developing countries: a task-technology fit perspective