Abstract is missing.
- Beyond open government: ontologies and data architectures to support ethical consumptionLuis F. Luna-Reyes, Theresa A. Pardo, Djoko Sigit Sayogo, Giri Kumar Tayi, David F. Andersen, Jing Zhang 0006, Jana Hrdinová. 1-4 [doi]
- Exploring process barriers to release public sector information in local governmentPeter Conradie, Sunil Choenni. 5-13 [doi]
- Implementation framework for open data in ColombiaLydia Marleny Prieto, Ana Carolina Rodríguez, Johanna Pimiento. 14-17 [doi]
- Increasing Kenyan open data consumption: a design thinking approachLeonida N. Mutuku, Jessica Colaco. 18-21 [doi]
- New perspectives for electronic government in Brazil: the adoption of open government data in national and subnational governments of BrazilRicardo Matheus, Manuella Maia Ribeiro, José Carlos Vaz. 22-29 [doi]
- Open government 2.0: citizen empowerment through open data, web and mobile appsRodrigo Sandoval-Almazán, José Ramón Gil-García, Luis F. Luna-Reyes, Dolores E. Luna, Yaneileth Rojas-Romero. 30-33 [doi]
- A logistic multilevel model for civic engagement and community group impact in the digital ageB. Joon Kim, Stephen W. Kleinschmit. 34-37 [doi]
- Designing online deliberation using web 2.0 technologies: drafting a bill of law on internet regulation in BrazilFabro Steibel. 38-43 [doi]
- E-participation in the era of web 2.0: factors affecting citizens' active e-participation in local governanceJooho Lee, Soonhee Kim. 44-47 [doi]
- Genres of communication in activist eParticipation: a comparison of new and old mediaMarius Rohde Johannessen. 48-57 [doi]
- Internet voting: fatally torn between conflicting goals?Marco Prandini, Marco Ramilli. 58-61 [doi]
- A new roadmap for next-generation policy-makingFrancesco Mureddu, Gianluca Misuraca, David Osimo, Stefano Armenia. 62-66 [doi]
- Best international practices for access, ownership and use of information and communication technologies for people with sensory disabilitiesMarco Peres, Paula Suárez. 67-70 [doi]
- E-government education at the public administration departments in TurkeyCenay Babaoglu, H. Serkan Akilli, Mehmet Akif Demircioglu. 71-74 [doi]
- e-Government in Latin American countries: are they building national policies with a regional perspective?J. Ignacio Criado. 75-78 [doi]
- e-Government in Russia: is or seems?Lyudmila Bershadskaya, Andrei Chugunov, Dmitry Trutnev. 79-82 [doi]
- Framework for useful transparency websites for citizensJosune Arcelus. 83-86 [doi]
- The circular continuum of agencies, libraries, and users: a model of e-government in practiceNatalie Greene Taylor, Paul T. Jaeger, Ursula Gorham, John Carlo Bertot, Ruth Lincoln, Elizabeth Larson. 87-94 [doi]
- The critical success factors for websites for Chinese migrant farmer workers: a multi-case studyFang Wang, Lihong Gu. 95-104 [doi]
- The development of public smart phone apps in Korea: empirical approachSeok-Jin Eom, Mi Yeon Lee, Jun Houng Kim. 105-108 [doi]
- Understanding citizens' perceptions of e-government services in MexicoJuan M. Gómez Reynoso, Celene Navarrete, Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán. 109-112 [doi]
- Factors influencing exchange activities in transnational knowledge networks: the case of the Hajj-MDSSMohammed A. Gharawi, Theresa A. Pardo. 113-122 [doi]
- Information sharing and financial market regulation: understanding the capability gapDjoko Sigit Sayogo, Theresa A. Pardo, Peter A. Bloniarz. 123-131 [doi]
- On public service provision informative phase: a dialogue-based model and platformEfthimios Tambouris, Vasiliki Outsetari, Konstantinos A. Tarabanis. 132-142 [doi]
- The complexity of cross-boundary information sharing: an organizational perspective on Taiwan e-governmentTung-Mou Yang. 143-145 [doi]
- A patent system ontology for facilitating retrieval of patent related informationSiddharth Taduri, Gloria T. Lau, Kincho H. Law, Jay P. Kesan. 146-157 [doi]
- Digitisation of electoral rolls: analysis of a multi-agency e-government project in PakistanHasnain Bokhari, Mustafa Khan. 158-165 [doi]
- Integrating argumentation technologies and context-based search for intelligent processing of citizens' opinion in social mediaCarlos Iván Chesñevar, Ana Gabriela Maguitman, Elsa Estevez, Ramón F. Brena. 166-170 [doi]
- Preparing for digital curation governance: educating stewards of public informationChristopher A. Lee, Helen R. Tibbo. 171-174 [doi]
- REGNET: regulatory information management, compliance and analysisKincho H. Law, Gloria T. Lau. 175-183 [doi]
- From information-poor to information-rich: bridging regional economic disparities in Nigeria through e-governanceSanjo O. Faniran, Kayode M. Olaniyan. 184-187 [doi]
- ICT for development and the MuNet program: experiences and lessons learnt from an indigenous municipality in GuatemalaJorge López-Bachiller, Javier Saenz-Core, Diego Cardona. 188-191 [doi]
- ICT policy in Africa: a comparative study of Ghana and Kenya drawing on lessons from developed countriesAgnes Owuato Odongo. 192-201 [doi]
- Laggards or victims of socioeconomic conditions?: findings from ongoing survey of female slum-dwellers without cell phone ownershipDevendra Potnis, Kanchan Deosthali. 202-205 [doi]
- Promoting user uptake of e-government in ColombiaDiana Parra Silva, Johanna Pimiento Quintero. 206-209 [doi]
- Measuring organizational interoperability in practice: the case study of population welfare department of government of Sindh, PakistanDevender Maheshwari, Marijn Janssen. 216-225 [doi]
- Ranking and hotspot detection methods on infant health for districts in Java, Indonesia: e-governance micro toolsYekti Widyaningsih, Wayne L. Myers. 226-235 [doi]
- Technological assessment of e-government web presence in NigeriaMichael Awoleye, Blessing Ojuloge, Willie Siyanbola. 236-242 [doi]
- Exploring social media usage in Saudi e-government websitesHend S. Al-Khalifa, Muna S. Al-Razgan, Nora I. Al-Rajebah, Ameera M. Almasoud. 243-247 [doi]
- Government crisis communication on the microblog: a theory framework and the case of Shanghai metro rear-end collisionXiao Liang. 248-257 [doi]
- Government official microblogs: an effective platform for facilitating inclusive governanceXinping Liu, Lei Zheng. 258-261 [doi]
- Managing Chinese government microblogs: enablers and barriersLei Zheng. 262-265 [doi]
- Study on social media applications by government in Hong KongHuina Xu, Qian Chen. 267-270 [doi]
- E-government and transformation of governance and service delivery in Bangladesh: a developing country perspectiveNoore Alam Siddiquee. 271-278 [doi]
- Evaluating and assessing a typology of ubiquitous city services by classifying and assigning actual services from an inventory of identified services in practiceJungwoo Lee, Hyejung Lee, Taesung Kim. 279-285 [doi]
- Explaining the eGovernment paradox: an analysis of two decades of evidence from scientific literature and practice on barriers to eGovernmentAlberto Savoldelli, Cristiano Codagnone, Gianluca Misuraca. 287-296 [doi]
- Investigating the relationships between accountability and governments' transformation to eGovernmentM. Sirajul Islam, Åke Grönlund. 297-300 [doi]
- Technologies, tools and web 2.0 in support of public administration workplace communicationsMilena Krumova. 301-309 [doi]
- Transforming city government: a case study of Philly311Taewoo Nam, Theresa A. Pardo. 310-319 [doi]
- A literature review: IT governance guidelines and areasRuben Filipe de Sousa Pereira, Miguel Mira da Silva. 320-323 [doi]
- Assessment of success factors of e-government project implementation: challenges for the Kosovo e-government perspectiveArtan Rexhepi, Blerim Rexha, Agni Dika. 324-331 [doi]
- Computer supported contractor selection for public administration venturesZbigniew Paszkiewicz, Wojciech Cellary. 332-335 [doi]
- E-government success factors in the context of an IT-enabled budget reform: a questionnaire reportGabriel Puron Cid. 336-345 [doi]
- Public CIO, figurehead or decision-maker?: the case of GermanyNiels Proske, Moreen Heine, Norbert Gronau. 346-349 [doi]
- Design and implementation of a public school government-to-employee systemCarl Strang, Ira Goldstein. 350-354 [doi]
- E-governance and millennium development goals: sustainable development perspective in rural IndiaHarekrishna Misra. 354-364 [doi]
- Harnessing renewable energy technologies for ICT and e-governance services in un-electrified communities in rural NepalMona Sharma. 365-368 [doi]
- ICT-enabled delivery of maternal health servicesJohanna Ekua Awotwi. 369-378 [doi]
- If we build it will they come?: a mixed-method exploration of high speed broadband access and economic developmentAmy Huffman. 379-384 [doi]
- An e-democracy experience: digital cabinet office of Rio Grande do Sul state (Brazil)Marie Anne Macadar, Gabriela Viale Pereira, Vanessa Marques Daniel. 385-388 [doi]
- Social inclusion and digital divide: eParticipation dilemmas in municipalitiesLukasz Porwol, Padraic O'Donoghue, John G. Breslin, Chris Coughlan, Brendan Mulligan. 389-392 [doi]
- Studying Chinese government microblogs: content and interactionsTuo Zheng, Lei Zheng. 393-401 [doi]
- CRHIS: cloud based rural healthcare information systemManas Ranjan Patra, Rama Krushna Das, Rabi Prasad Padhy. 402-405 [doi]
- Data collection in a degraded network: case of developing countries or countries in crisisFidèl Jiomekong Azanzi, Laurent Broto, Daniel Hagimont, Suzy Temate, Maurice Tchuente. 406-409 [doi]
- The secure platform problem taxonomy and analysis of existing proposals to address this problemMichael Schläpfer, Melanie Volkamer. 410-418 [doi]
- Anti-corruption online monitoring systems in BrazilRicardo Matheus, Manuella Maia Ribeiro, José Carlos Vaz, Cesar A. de Souza. 419-425 [doi]
- E-government portals in central America: a preliminary evaluation and ranking (2011-2012)Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán, José Ramón Gil-García, Nancy Karina Saucedo Leyva. 426-429 [doi]
- Evolving e-government benchmarking to better cover technology development and emerging societal needsKim Andreasson, Jeremy Millard, Mikael Snaprud. 430-439 [doi]
- Impacts of the public procurement reform in Chile on the municipal levelGastón Concha, Roberto Anrique. 440-449 [doi]
- A crowdsourcing model for public consultations on draft lawsVasiliy Burov, Evgeny Patarakin, Boris Yarmakhov. 450-451 [doi]
- A novel scheme of government information sharing system for implementing paperless government in KoreaJohn Jong-Uk Choi, JooWon Cho, Dong Hwa Kim, Chang Hun Yoo. 452-453 [doi]
- A structure oriented evaluation model for readiness of e-governanceUranchimeg Tudevdagva, Uyanga Sambuu. 454-455 [doi]
- An initial exploration of hyperlinks of African government portal websitesAbebe Rorissa. 456-457 [doi]
- C-DAC pan India strategy in high performance computing for human advancementKapil Mathur, Sandeep Agrawal, Sucheta Pawar, Abhishek Das, Goldi Misra. 458-459 [doi]
- Crowdsourcing as data sharing: a regional web-based real estate development databaseRobert Goodspeed, Christian Spanring, Timothy Reardon. 460-463 [doi]
- Drivers for public sector contestsClaudia Louis. 464-465 [doi]
- E-reconciliation in RwandaBagambiki Erika. 466-467 [doi]
- Electronic participation system: the Nigerian perspectiveIbrahim Aliyu. 468-469 [doi]
- Enterprise systems and government organizational changes: a socio-materiality analysisLoni Hagen, Donghee Sinn. 470-471 [doi]
- Evaluation of e-governance projects of NepalGanesh Prasad Adhikari. 472-473 [doi]
- Exploiting the FLOSS paradigm in collaborative e-learning: application to e-governmentSara Fernandes, Antonio Cerone, Luís Soares Barbosa. 475-476 [doi]
- From inter-agency information sharing to open data: a case study of Taiwan E-GovernmentTung-Mou Yang. 477-478 [doi]
- From international open government dataset search to discovery: a semantic web service approachEric Rozell, John S. Erickson, Jim Hendler. 480-481 [doi]
- Implementation of integrated tax system COTS productUyanga Sambuu, Zolbayar Chuluunbat, Esbold Unurkhaan. 483-484 [doi]
- Information sharing in inter-departmental collaboration: a conceptual framework for local government authoritiesAlinaghi Ziaee Bigdeli, Muhammad Mustafa Kamal, Sergio de Cesare. 485-486 [doi]
- Interagency collaboration in providing public services in Russia: a legal perspectiveEvgeny Styrin, Andrey Zhulin. 487-488 [doi]
- Monitoring methods of e-governance development assessment: comparative analysis of international and Russian experienceLyudmila Bershadskaya, Andrei Chugunov, Dmitrii Trutnev. 490-491 [doi]
- Moroccan e-government ten years evolutionsMohamed Mohyi Eddine El Aichi. 492-493 [doi]
- Opportunities for improving eGovernment: using language technology in workflow managementOla Knutsson, Eriks Sneiders, Alyaa Alfalahi. 495-496 [doi]
- Prioritization and geo-spatiotemporal hotspot detection of forest loss hotspot using NDVI as a response variableE. Koli Rajesh, Anil G. Rao, Gauri Rane, Manish R. Joshi. 497-498 [doi]
- Quality assurance case study of an ICT supported legally binding election in AustriaKlaus John, Andreas Ehringfeld, Gerald Fischer. 500-501 [doi]
- Quality assurance model for e-governance projects: a case study on e-counselingRama Krushna Das, Manas Ranjan Patra, Pabitrananda Patnaik. 502-503 [doi]
- Regulation room: moving towards civic participation 2.0Josiah Heidt, Jackeline Solivan. 504-505 [doi]
- Revival of farming community with m-agricultureSwapna Veldanda. 506-507 [doi]
- Social media usage guidelines for the government of the United Arab EmiratesIbrahim Elbadawi. 508-510 [doi]
- System for measuring e-gov: a multi-stakeholder approachCamilo Cristancho Mantilla, Juan Carlos Noriega Silva. 511-512 [doi]
- The digital divide's devaluing of local e-governmentRichard Huff, Liana Kleeman. 513-515 [doi]
- The importance of electronic accessibility in Brazilian juridical electronic processAdriana Simeão Ferreira, Daniel Gonçalves de Melo, Leondeniz Freitas. 516-517 [doi]
- The use of mobile and wireless technology and food quality control in ChinaShuhua (Monica) Liu, Qianli Yuan, Danyao Li, Lei Zheng. 518-519 [doi]
- The use of recursive bisection in the mapping of sample New York state electoral districtsDavid Molik, Michelle Sharer. 520-521 [doi]
- Toward interoperable government: a case of BangladeshM. Shakhawat Hossain Bhuiyan. 522-523 [doi]
- Trust issues in the e-government implementation in NepalGarima Dhakal, Prajwal Amatya, Bal Krishna Bal. 524-525 [doi]
- eGovernance implementation model for public sector innovationM. Irfanullah Arfeen, Nawar Khan. 526-527 [doi]
- Digital curation for public sector professionalsA. Christopher Lee, Helen Tibbo. 528-530 [doi]
- Use of agent-based modeling for e-governance researchYushim Kim, Callie McGraw. 531-534 [doi]