New information technologies are being applied swiftly to all levels of government service: local, county, regional and even national and international. Information technology (IT) is being used to improve data management and data sharing, planning and decision support, service delivery, and more. A
Digital Government: E-Government Research, Case Studies, and Implementation
β Scribed by Stephen Coleman (auth.), Dr. Hsinchun Chen, Program Manager Lawrence Brandt, Assistant Director Valerie Gregg, Professor Roland TraunmΓΌller, Director Sharon Dawes Ph.D, Eduard Hovy, Professor Ann Macintosh, Associate Director Catherine A. Larson (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 764
- Series
- Integrated Series In Information Systems 17
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
New information technologies are being applied swiftly to all levels of government service: local, county, regional and even national and international. Information technology (IT) is being used to improve data management and data sharing, planning and decision support, service delivery, and more. Application areas affected by government mandates to improve e-government service include healthcare and safety; law enforcement, security, and justice; education; land use; and many others. Information technology is being used to increase public access to information, to provide more convenient and timely transaction services, and to increase citizen participation in the establishment of government regulations and other processes. DIGITAL GOVERNMENT: E-Government Research, Case Studies, and Implementation provides the field with a definitive, interdisciplinary, and understandable review of recent IT and related research of particular importance to digital government. The book also includes explorations of current and future policy implications, and case studies of successful applications in a variety of government settings.
The book has been organized into three parts: Unit 1 covers the international foundations of digital government and related social, public, and legal issues (such as privacy, confidentiality, trust and security) that are evolving from governmentsβ new ways of doing business. Unit 2 examines current IT research that is impacting the advancement of digital government purposes and initiatives. In this section, a wide range of technologies are discussed with the objective of outlining a framework of state-of-the-art technologies showing the most promise for e-government initiatives. Unit 3 highlights case studies and applications of successful e-government initiatives from around the world which have wider lessons and implications. High impact projects are explored in detail, with a "lessons learned" discussion included with each case study. Each chapter is accompanied by references, suggested additional readings, online resources, and questions for discussion.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-lvii
Foundations of Digital Government....Pages 3-19
Discipline or Interdisciplinary Study Domain? Challenges and Promises in Electronic Government Research....Pages 21-41
An Outline for the Foundations of Digital Government Research....Pages 43-59
Lost In Competition? The State of the Art in E-Government Research....Pages 61-83
E-Democracy and E-Participation Research in Europe....Pages 85-102
Introduction to Digital Government Research in Public Policy and Management....Pages 103-125
Privacy in an Electronic Government Context....Pages 127-140
Accessibility of Federal Electronic Government....Pages 141-155
The Current State of Electronic Voting in the United States....Pages 157-180
E-Enabling the Mobile Legislator....Pages 181-199
History of Digital Government Research in the United States....Pages 203-218
Data and Knowledge Integration for e-Government....Pages 219-231
Ontologies in the Legal Domain....Pages 233-261
Public Safety Information Sharing: An Ontological Perspective....Pages 263-282
Collaborative Cyberinfrastructure for Transnational Digital Government....Pages 283-305
Semantics-Based Threat Structure Mining for Homeland Security....Pages 307-329
Identity Management for e-Government Services....Pages 331-352
Feature Integration for Geospatial Information: A Review and Outlook....Pages 353-376
Geoinformatics of Hotspot Detection and Prioritization for Digital Governance....Pages 377-394
Geoinformation Technologies to Support Collaborative Emergency Management....Pages 395-420
Sustainable Cross-Boundary Information Sharing....Pages 421-438
Urbansim: Using Simulation to Inform Public Deliberation and Decision-Making....Pages 439-464
Taking Best Practice Forward....Pages 467-486
Epetitioning in the Scottish Parliament....Pages 487-501
Citizen Access to Government Statistical Information....Pages 503-529
Infectious Disease Informatics and Syndromic Surveillance....Pages 531-559
Supporting Domain-Specific Digital Libraries in Government: Two Case Studies....Pages 561-583
Business-Technology Alignments in e-Government: A Large-Scale Taiwan Government Electronic Record Management Systems Study....Pages 585-613
Research and Development of Key Technologies for e-Government: Case Studies in China....Pages 615-645
New Zealand's 2006 Census Online: A Case Study....Pages 647-670
Multidisciplinary e-Government Research and Education as a Catalyst for Effective Information Technology Transfer....Pages 671-695
A Hybrid e-Government Model: Case Studies in Shanghai....Pages 697-718
Back Matter....Pages 719-730
β¦ Subjects
Business Information Systems; e-Commerce/e-business; Political Science; Information Systems and Communication Service; Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet); Operations Research/Decision Theory
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