Abstract is missing.
- Is the data fair?: An assessment of the data quality of algorithmic policing systemsEmmanuel Sebastian Udoh. 1-7 [doi]
- Evaluating the impact of artificial intelligence technologies in public services: towards an assessment frameworkColin van Noordt, Gianluca Misuraca. 8-16 [doi]
- Decision support grievance redressal system using sentence sentiment analysisRama Krushna Das, Manisha Panda, Harekrishna Misra. 17-24 [doi]
- A first approach towards integrating computational argumentation in cognitive citiesCarlos Iván Chesñevar, María Paula González, Ana Gabriela Maguitman, Elsa Estevez. 25-32 [doi]
- Mapping crime descriptions to law articles using deep learningMarco Vink, Niels Netten, Mortaza S. Bargh, Susan W. van den Braak, Sunil Choenni. 33-43 [doi]
- Governments' strategic stance toward artificial intelligence: an interpretive display on EuropeGianluigi Viscusi, Aengus Collins, Marie-Valentine Florin. 44-53 [doi]
- Using chatbots and life events to provide public service informationAnestis Stamatis, Anastasios Dasyras, Alexandros Gerontas, Efthimios Tambouris. 54-61 [doi]
- Accelerating public service delivery in India: application of internet of things and artificial intelligence in agricultureCharru Malhotra, Rashmi Anand. 62-69 [doi]
- An IoT application case study to optimize electricity consumption in the government sectorTeófilo T. Branco, Ilka M. Kawashita, Filipe de Sá-Soares, Cláudio N. Monteiro. 70-81 [doi]
- Recommendations for artificial intelligence implementation in African governments: results from researchers and practitioners of AI/MLTupokigwe Isagah, Albogast Musabila. 82-89 [doi]
- The use of AI in public services: results from a preliminary mapping across the EUGianluca Misuraca, Colin van Noordt, Anys Boukli. 90-99 [doi]
- What do governments plan in the field of artificial intelligence?: Analysing national AI strategies using NLPTheodoros Papadopoulos, Yannis Charalabidis. 100-111 [doi]
- Macao government fights the COVID-19 epidemics with the help of e-Government and big dataLue Li. 112-115 [doi]
- Building the right AI governance model in OmanHalah Al Zadjali. 116-119 [doi]
- Identifying the public interest in COVID-19 contact tracing apps in Switzerland based on online search behaviorChristoph Glauser, Loris Schmid, Mascha Kurpicz-Briki. 120-123 [doi]
- A new business model for digital governance of public records using blockchainSushil Prakash, Ilaventhan Gunalan. 124-128 [doi]
- A development framework for blockchain technologies in digital governmentIoannis Koulizakis, Euripides Loukis. 129-136 [doi]
- A legal framework for blockchain technology in BrazilRodrigo Cardoso Silva. 137-142 [doi]
- New technology interventions including blockchain technology in land record and registry management in IndiaAnjali Kaushik. 143-151 [doi]
- Blockchain technology to improve transparency in the Brazilian destatization process: the case of BNDESMilber Fernandes Morais Bourguignon, Vanessa Da Rocha Santos Almeida, Marie Anne Macadar. 152-156 [doi]
- Vaccination drive and cyber threats in IndiaJayan Vasudevan, Sreejith Alathur. 157-167 [doi]
- Public and private healthcare organisations: a socio-technical model for identifying cybersecurity aspectsKalliopi Anastasopoulou, Pasquale Mari, Aimilia Magkanaraki, Emmanouil G. Spanakis, Matteo Merialdo, Vangelis Sakkalis, Sabina Magalini. 168-175 [doi]
- Evaluating privacy during the COVID-19 public health emergency: the case of facial recognition technologiesLuis Felipe M. Ramos. 176-179 [doi]
- e-Governance for healthcare service delivery in India: challenges and opportunities in security and privacySwapnil Shrivastava, T. K. Srikanth, Dileep VS. 180-183 [doi]
- The implementation of a digital curriculum on the local level: lessons from a Swiss case studyTereza Cahlikova. 184-191 [doi]
- Human biases in government algorithmsLörinc Thurnay, Thomas J. Lampoltshammer. 192-198 [doi]
- Change capability: an indicator-based case study on the example of the German refugee crisisKian Niroomand, Moreen Heine. 199-205 [doi]
- Legal framework for self-driving cars: the case of RussiaMikhail Bundin, Aleksei Martynov, Fedor Rumyantsev. 206-213 [doi]
- On the science foundation of digital governance and transformationYannis Charalabidis, Zoi Lachana. 214-221 [doi]
- SINCO GUÁRICO communication model: an experience of e-Governance in Venezuela 2019Augusto Perdomo, Winner Arteaga, Lennys Medina. 222-225 [doi]
- Technological infrastructure for remote classes in Brazilian public schools during the COVID-19 pandemicEdilaine de Azevedo Vieira, Álvaro Maximiliano Pino Coviello, Taiane Ritta Coelho. 226-229 [doi]
- Mapping digital governance projects through complex networksLoredana Bellantuono, Alfonso Monaco, Nicola Amoroso, Sabina Tangaro, Vincenzo Aquaro, Roberto Bellotti. 230-233 [doi]
- Adapting national interoperability frameworks beyond EIF 3.0: the case of GreeceVictoria Kalogirou, Antonios Stasis, Yannis Charalabidis. 234-243 [doi]
- Factors affecting cloud storage adoption by Greek municipalitiesNiki Kyriakou, Loukis Euripides, Dimitropoulou Paraskevi. 244-253 [doi]
- Defining a digital city strategy in a collaborative way: the case of Kavala, GreeceYannis Charalabidis, Charalampos Papadopoulos, Athanasios Davalas. 254-262 [doi]
- An executive project management approach to e-GovernmentPanagiotis Alexopoulos, Maria Smyrli, Vasilios Bagiokos, Ioannis Kokaras, Theodora Petroula. 263-266 [doi]
- Digital transformation of public services and administration: a case study of BulgariaLinda Lee Bower. 267-270 [doi]
- An empirical framework for digital government assessmentSushil Prakash, Ilaventhan Gunalan. 271-278 [doi]
- Requirements of the digital society for the governance assessment methodsRoumiana Tsankova, Joanna Alexieva. 279-286 [doi]
- Participation of persons with disabilities in grassroots organizations (OBPPs) through the Community Integration System (SINCO)Aryam Salazar Castillo, Rosa Sánchez Tortolero, Jorbin Martínez Medina, Jean Carlo Márquez González. 287-297 [doi]
- Assessment of organizational interoperability in e-Government: a new model and tool for assessing organizational interoperability maturity of a public service in practiceVicky Margariti, Dimosthenis Anagnostopoulos, Anastasia Papastilianou, Teta Stamati, Sofia Angeli. 298-308 [doi]
- The evolution of African e-Government websites: a comparative analysisAbebe Rorissa, Emmanuel Sebastian Udoh. 309-314 [doi]
- Assessing the quality of e-Government services for entrepreneurship: a comparative study in Russia's regionsAlexander M. Pakhalov, Natalia A. Rozhkova, Charalampos Alexopoulos. 315-325 [doi]
- The online discourse as a form of e-Participation: the experience of internet discourse researchOlga Filatova, Daniil Volkovskii. 326-333 [doi]
- Developing a model to readiness assessment of open government data in public institutions in ColombiaMariutsi Alexandra Osorio Sanabria, Ferney Amaya-Fernandez, Mayda Patricia González-Zabala. 334-340 [doi]
- Establishing relational trust in e-Participation: a systematic literature review to propose a modelBurcu Demirdoven, Ecem Buse Sevinc Cubuk, Naci Karkin. 341-348 [doi]
- The public security test of Brazilian e-Voting system: the challenges in pre-electoral observationRodrigo Cardoso Silva. 349-358 [doi]
- HSWAI: a health sector website assessment instrumentDemetrios Sarantis, Delfina Soares, Joana Carvalho. 359-368 [doi]
- Technology readiness revisited: a proposal for extending the scope of impact assessment of European public servicesIlenia Bruno, Georges Lobo, Beatrice Valente Covino, Alessandro Donarelli, Valeria Marchetti, Anna Schiavone Panni, Francesco Molinari. 369-380 [doi]
- Evaluating global open government data: methods and statusLei Zheng, Wai-Min Kwok, Vincenzo Aquaro, Xinyu Qi, Wenzeng Lyu. 381-391 [doi]
- Digital governance assessment from the conceptualization of information infrastructuresAlandey Severo Leite da Silva, Antonio Alberto Texeira. 392-395 [doi]
- Measures to safeguard food security during COVID-19: the experience of the sowing plan in VenezuelaAryam Salazar Castillo. 396-399 [doi]
- Understanding the responsiveness of local-level e-Governance platforms of BangladeshSaima Khan, Moinul Zaber. 400-403 [doi]
- Interplay of core-competencies leading to the implementation of future-oriented and sustainable e-Governance: a mixed method researchApeksha Hooda. 404-409 [doi]
- The role of open data in enabling fiscal transparency and accountability in municipalities in Africa: South Africa and Nigeria case studiesPaul Kariuki, Jude A. Adeleke, Lizzy Oluwatoyin Ofusori. 410-418 [doi]
- E-Government in Poland in public data and opinions of Poles: empirical analysisIzabela Kapsa, Magdalena Musial-Karg. 419-429 [doi]
- Impression analysis of trending topics in Twitter with classification algorithmsDavid Valle Cruz, Asdrúbal López Chau, Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán. 430-441 [doi]
- Connecting the unconnected: innovations in mobile government in the Indian state of Andhra PradeshSundar Balakrishna. 442-451 [doi]
- Identifying design principles for proactive services through systematically understanding the reactivity-proactivity spectrumRegina Erlenheim, Dirk Draheim, Kuldar Taveter. 452-458 [doi]
- Cross-administration comparative analysis of open fiscal dataFathoni A. Musyaffa, Jens Lehmann 0001, Hajira Jabeen. 459-468 [doi]
- Technology adoption for emergency preparedness and response in rural areas: identifying the main determinantsYenisel Gulatee, Qianli Yuan, Mila Gascó-Hernández, José Ramón Gil-García, Megan K. Sutherland-Mitzner, Theresa A. Pardo. 469-476 [doi]
- Framework to prioritize digital transformation initiatives based on the country's development impactDenisse Cañete, Romina Torres, Rodrigo Salas, Hernán Astudillo. 477-484 [doi]
- Who drives data in data-driven governance?: The politics of data production in India's livelihood programRajesh Dinesh Hanbal, Amit Prakash, Janaki Srinivasan. 485-493 [doi]
- The role of organizational citizenship behavior and strategic alignment in increasing the generation of public value through digital transformationEdimara M. Luciano, Guilherme Costa Wiedenhöft. 494-501 [doi]
- Exploring digital government transformation: a literature reviewGiovanni Liva, Cristiano Codagnone, Gianluca Misuraca, Vaida Gineikyte, Egidijus Barcevicius. 502-509 [doi]
- Historical and prospective analysis of the military police of Paraná: from horse policing to digital governanceFelipe Haleyson Ribeiro dos Santos, Edson Ronaldo Guarido Filho, Taiane Ritta Coelho, Jair Aurelio Santos Dias Antunes. 510-513 [doi]
- Is the GaaP wider than we think?: Applying a sociotechnical lens to Government-as-a-PlatformDavid Jamieson, Rob Wilson, Mike Martin. 514-517 [doi]
- Social media enabled e-Participation: a lexicon-based sentiment analysis using unsupervised machine learningVicente A. Pitogo, Christine Diane L. Ramos. 518-528 [doi]
- Behavioral factors influencing the opening of government data by civil servants: initial findings from the literatureFernando Kleiman, Sebastiaan A. Meijer, Marijn Janssen. 529-534 [doi]
- From open budget to participatory budgeting in the context of the Eurasian Digital AgendaRadomir Bolgov, Andrei V. Chugunov. 535-543 [doi]
- Problem areas in e-Participation: a systematic reviewRaissa Angie Daniela Quintero-Angulo, Jenny Marcela Sánchez-Torres, Diana Marcela Cardona-Román. 544-550 [doi]
- Municipalities e-Participation initiatives through Facebook: citizens perspectiveAyman Alarabiat, Delfina Soares, Elsa Estevez. 551-559 [doi]
- Government ICT-based cross sectoral collaboration strategy for financial support of low-income families during the COVID-19 pandemicAnil Yasin Ar, Asad Abbas. 560-563 [doi]
- Exploring the case of a local food bank to understand information technology use in government information networksJoana Carvalho, Rui Dinis Sousa. 564-567 [doi]
- Sociocultural information urban space in smart city contextVitalina Karachay, Dmitry Prokudin, Olga Kononova, Daria Pilyasova. 568-575 [doi]
- Determinants of mobile health application awareness and use in India: an empirical analysisRajesh R. Pai, Sreejith Alathur. 576-584 [doi]
- Characterising smart initiatives' planning in Smart Cities: an empirical analysis in Spanish Smart CitiesManuel Pedro Rodríguez Bolívar, Cristina Alcaide-Muñoz, Laura Alcaide-Muñoz. 585-595 [doi]
- Is your city fast enough to be smart?Matthew Perkins. 596-601 [doi]
- Governance innovations, digital transformation and the generation of public value in Smart City initiativesGabriela Viale Pereira, Luis F. Luna-Reyes, José Ramón Gil-García. 602-608 [doi]
- A taxonomy of measures for smart citiesJudy Backhouse. 609-619 [doi]
- Research needs for disruptive technologies in smart citiesGabriela Viale Pereira, Maria A. Wimmer, Alexander Ronzhyn. 620-627 [doi]
- Clearing the existing fog over the smart sustainable city concept: highlighting the importance of governanceLuiza Schuch de Azambuja, Gabriela Viale Pereira, Robert Krimmer. 628-637 [doi]
- What makes a city smart?: Reconsidering the core components in the Brazilian contextBeatriz Barreto Brasileiro Lanza, José Ramón Gil-García, Theresa A. Pardo. 638-645 [doi]
- Towards a measuring framework for knowledge creation in smart citiesAndrea Ceballos-Zuluaga, Luis Daniel Benavides Navarro, Victoria Eugenia Ospina-Becerra. 646-653 [doi]
- Towards a COBIT5 approach to ICT governance requirements in smart citiesLuiz Claudio Diogo Reis, Simone Bacellar Leal Ferreira, Flávia Cristina Bernardini, Claudia Cappelli. 654-661 [doi]
- Making the smart region transition: towards a conceptual and assessment frameworkHarekrishna Misra, Adegboyega Ojo. 662-669 [doi]
- Towards a good practices catalog for ICT governance in the Brazilian smart cities contextLuiz Claudio Diogo Reis, Simone Bacellar Leal Ferreira, Flávia Cristina Bernardini, Claudia Cappelli. 670-673 [doi]
- Smart city collaboration model: a case study of university-city collaborationLill Sarv, Kristel Kibus, Ralf-Martin Soe. 674-677 [doi]
- Initiatives for smarter and more sustainable cities in two Brazilian cities: drivers, benefits and challengesLauro André Ribeiro, Maurício Kunz, Thaísa Leal da Silva, Letiane Benincá. 678-681 [doi]
- Platforms real estate: a brief analysis of what the literature contains and lacksLucas Meirelles Toledo Ramos Batista. 682-685 [doi]
- Deep learning based multi-label text classification of UNGA resolutionsFrancesco Sovrano, Monica Palmirani, Fabio Vitali. 686-695 [doi]
- Better access to law by codification and consolidation of legal acts: the case of the Hellenic Law Codification PortalAntonios Stasis, Vassiliki Dalakou, Ilias Karakatsanis, Loukia Demiri, Georgia Valatsou, Dimitrios Sarantis. 696-704 [doi]
- Digitizing parliaments: a case study of SerbiaStevan Gostojic, Biljana Ledenican, Nenad Grsic. 705-710 [doi]
- User-centric decision support system design in legal informatics: a typology of usersShefali Virkar, Charalampos Alexopoulos, Stefania Stavropoulou, Sofia Tsekeridou, Anna-Sophie Novak. 711-722 [doi]
- Architecting an innovative big open legal data analytics, search and retrieval platformStefania Stavropoulou, Ilias Romas, Sofia Tsekeridou, Michalis Avgerinos Loutsaris, Thomas J. Lampoltshammer, Lörinc Thurnay, Shefali Virkar, Günther Schefbeck, Nektarios Kyriakou, Zoi Lachana, Charalampos Alexopoulos, Yannis Charalabidis. 723-730 [doi]
- Legal informatics from the aspect of interoperability: a review of systems, tools and ontologiesMichalis Avgerinos Loutsaris, Yannis Charalabidis. 731-737 [doi]
- Application of enterprise integration patterns for the digital transformation of parliamentary controlSotiris Leventis, Vasileios Anastasiou, Fotios Fitsilis. 738-741 [doi]
- Law analysis to support public process designKaouther Mezaache, Latifa Mahdaoui. 742-745 [doi]
- Online platforms of public participation: a deliberative democracy or a delusion?Jonathan Davies, Rob Procter. 746-753 [doi]
- Conditions influencing e-Participation: a cross-country comparative mixed methods analysisSeulki Lee-Geiller. 754-761 [doi]
- Public value creation through digital transformation in tax administration: a conceptual model proposalCaroline Tuttman, Marie Anne Macadar. 762-766 [doi]
- Towards an e-Government semantic interoperability assessment frameworkAlexandros Gerontas. 767-774 [doi]
- ThermiAir: an innovative air quality monitoring system for airborne particulate matter in Thermi, GreecePanagiotis Symeonidis, Pantelis Mitropoulos, Simeon Taskaris, Theodoros Vakkas, Eleni Adamopoulou, Dimitrios Karakirios, Vasileios Salamalikis, Georgios Kosmopoulos, Andreas Kazantzidis. 775-778 [doi]
- Linked government data hub, an ontology agnostic data harvester and APIVictoria Kalogirou, Sander van Dooren, Ilias Dimopoulos, Yannis Charalabidis, Jean-Paul De-Baets, Georges Lobo. 779-782 [doi]
- Enabling anonymous whistleblowing through online reporting mechanisms in BrazilBárbara Luiza Coutinho do Nascimento, Alexandre Rodrigues de Oliveira. 783-786 [doi]
- Effective inclusion of citizens through e-Governance services: case study of direct benefit transfer in IndiaRajan Gupta, Saibal K. Pal. 787-790 [doi]
- Selecting indicators for the Smart City Pilot in Knowledge Oasis Muscat (KOM), Sultanate of OmanShaima Al Mahrooqi, Judy Backhouse. 791-794 [doi]
- Facilitating cross-sectoral digital product developmentRalf-Martin Soe. 795-798 [doi]
- Methods and tools in the early stages of legislationMoreen Heine, Matthias Schmid. 799-802 [doi]
- Agility in public sector IT projectsMaria Dietel, Moreen Heine. 803-806 [doi]
- How data vocabulary standards enhance the exchange of information exposed through APIs: the case of public service descriptionsEmidio Stani, Florian Barthélemy, Kareljan Raes, Maxime Pittomvils, Miguel Alvarez Rodriguez. 807-810 [doi]
- The EIF monitoring mechanismFederico Chiarelli, Barbora Kudzmanaite, Giorgio Cacciaguerra Ranghieri, Miguel Alvarez Rodriguez. 811-814 [doi]
- On the impact of technology on the workforce of governmentEvert-Jan Mulder, Renz Davits. 815-818 [doi]
- Petrobras' operation center: an oil and gas Brazilian company caseLuiz Felipe Ribeiro Barbalat Queiroz, Marie Anne Macadar. 819-822 [doi]
- Towards a register-based census in OmanAli Hussain Al-Lawati, Luís Soares Barbosa. 823-826 [doi]
- Key indicators for justice: evidence-based research for policy-makingMariana Lameiras, Maria João Costa, Delfina Soares, Soumaya Ben Dhaou. 827-830 [doi]
- Participatory urban planning through online webGIS platform: operations and toolsEleni Mougiakou, Anastasia Christaki, Giouli Athousaki, Theodoros Vakkas, George Velegrakis, Pantelis Mitropoulos, Thanos Andritsos, Dimitris Poulios, Kostas Vourekas, Sofia Tsadari, Anastasios Manos, Spyros Tzortzis. 831-834 [doi]
- Participatory budgeting and e-Participation in smart cities: comparative overviewVitalina Karachay, Andrei Chugunov, Ruzhena Neustroeva. 835-838 [doi]
- Application of social networks users digital fingerprints to predict their information imageAleksandr Sergeevich Tropnikov, Anna Borisovna Uglova, Boris Abdullohonovich Nizomutdinov. 839-842 [doi]
- Digital diversity and an inclusive smart society: a novel methodological search for digital participation and sustainable development in a Swedish suburbKarin Skill, Elin Wihlborg, Ahmed Kaharevic. 843-846 [doi]
- Online trust and ICTs usage: findings from St. Petersburg, RussiaLyudmila Vidiasova, Yury Kabanov. 847-850 [doi]
- Modeling city land use with an ontologyNatalia Chichkova, Alena Begler, Vitaly Vlasov. 851-854 [doi]