Handbook of research on e-government in emerging economies :
adoption, e-participation, and legal frameworks /
Kelvin Joseph Bwalya and Saul Zulu, editors.
Hershey, PA :
Information Science Reference,
2012.
2 v. (xxxviii, 758, cxxix p.) :
ill. ;
30 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1.Developments of e-Government in Sri Lanka: Opportunities and Challenges (pages 1-19) 2.Egyptian Local Government Website Portals: Examining Maturity Levels and Human Development Indicators (pages 20-36) 3.A Review of e-Government Initiatives in Tanzania: Challenges and Opportunities (pages 37-70) 4.A Snapshot Overview of the Digital Divide: e-Inclusion and e-Government in the Zambian Context (pages 71-89) 5.E-Documents and E-Signatures in Tanzania: Their Role, Status, and the Future (pages 90-122) 6.Voters’ Perception of the Adequacy and Suitability of e-Voting in the Nigeria Polity (pages 123-144) 7.A Critical Assessment of the Evaluation Methods of ICT Investment: The Case of a Small Island Economy with a Large Public Sector (pages 145-157) 8.E-Government in the Judiciary System: Assessing the Correlation between IT Investment and the Efficiency of Courts of Justice in Brazil (pages 158-178) 9.Business/IT Alignment Framework within e-Government System Case Study: E-Government in Syria (pages 179-193) 10.A Statistical Analysis of Priority Factors for Local e-Government in a Developing Country: Case Study of Yogyakarta Local Government, Indonesia (pages 194-211) 11.E-Government in Syria: Obstacles and Interoperability Framework (pages 212-236) 12.Benchmarking Botswana’s e-Government Initiatives with WSIS Principles: A Review of Progress and Challenges (pages 237-262) 13.Bridging From e-Government Practice to e-Government Research: Past Trends and Future Directions (pages 263-289) 14.E-Government in Malaysia: A Decade After (pages 290-306) 15.E-Waste Management in East African Community (pages 307-327) 16.E-Government for Transparency, Anti-Corruption, and Accountability: Challenges and Opportunities for Central American Countries (pages 328-350) 17.E-Government Strategy in Turkey: A Case for m-Government? (pages 351-373) 18.E-Democracy: An Enabler for Improved Participatory Democracy (pages 374-390) 19.Law Modeling and BPR for Public Administration Improvement (pages 391-410) 20.The e-Government Concept and e-Government Applications (pages 411-422) 21.E-Government Issues in Developing Countries: An Analysis from a Digital Divide, E-Skills, and Civil Conflict Theory Approach (pages 423-439) 22.Overlooking Organizational Culture: Problems in Analyzing the Success and Failures of E-government in Developing Countries (pages 440-454) 23.A Methodology to Evaluate ICT Platforms in the Implementation of e-Government (pages 455-473)24.Listening to the Ground: Key Indicators of e-Participation in Government for Africa (pages 474-495) 25.Adoption of E-Government Services in Developing Countries: An Empirical Evaluation (pages 496-520) 26.E-Government, Robotic, and Conventional Government in Developing Countries (pages 521-536) 27.Project Management: An e-Government Driver? (pages 537-558) 28.E-Government: Some Factors for a Conceptual Model (pages 559-572) 29.New Technology Communication in American State Governments: The Impact on Citizen Participation (pages 573-590) 30.Competence Development of E-Government: A Study Circle Approach (pages 591-604)31.The “Quicksilver Initiatives” as a Framework for e-Government Strategy Design in Developing Economies (pages 605-623) 32.Benchmarking Local e-Government: Lessons from the Adoption Process in a Tourist Town (pages 624-640) 33.Analyzing e-Government Research in Emerging Economies: Contextualization and Opportunities (pages 641-663) 34.Trends in Government e-Authentication: Policy and Practice (pages 664-677) 35.Institutionalisation, Framing, and Diffusion: The Logic of Openness in eGovernment and Implementation Decisions- A Lesson for Developing Countries (pages 678-698) 36.E-Government Challenges in European Countries (pages 699-716) 37.Is Romania Ready for Nation-Wide Public e-Services?: Five Factors to Consider before Adopting an E-Government Public Policy (pages 717-732) 38.Public E-Service Conditions in Lithuania (pages 733-757)
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"This book is a collection of knowledge on contemporary experiences on technological, societal and legal setups of e-Government implementation in emerging economies"--Provided by publisher.
Internet in public administration-- Developing countries.
Public administration-- Technological innovations-- Developing countries.
Electronic government information-- Developing countries.
Public administration-- Citizen participation-- Technological innovations-- Developing countries.
Internet in public administration-- Law and legislation-- Developing countries.