International Journal of Information Technology and Management
Web 2.0: a basis for the second society?
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Theory and practice of electronic governance
Public information strategies: Making government information available to citizens
Information Polity - Government Information Sharing and Integration: Combining the Social and the Technical. Papers from the 9th International Conference on Digital Government Research (d.g.o.2008)
Exploring the effects of experience on wiki anxiety and wiki usability: an online study
Proceedings of the 23rd British HCI Group Annual Conference on People and Computers: Celebrating People and Technology
On the role of the user in monitoring the environment in self-adaptive systems: a position paper
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems
Lawmaking in democracy 2.0 paradigm: the shift for the new forms of lawmaking
Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance
Social Science Computer Review
The impact of trust and relative advantage on internet voting diffusion
Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
Participative Public Policy Making Through Multiple Social Media Platforms Utilization
International Journal of Electronic Government Research
Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research
Hi-index | 0.00 |
A well-written, lively, optimistic book that calls for the transformation of technology in government from lipstick on a bulldog to total information awareness. This book is proactive in nature (see what these governments are really doing), does not call for a wholesale and costly transformation, and employs a subtle shaming of those governments that have not yet joined the 21st century. William Eggers's argument, conservative in nature, states that the world of politics would quickly and markedly benefit from this digital transformation in terms of a fiscal payoff, but a more profound change would result as governments become more transparent, more democratic, and more efficient.