Patterns of Business Rules to Enable Agile Business Processes
EDOC '07 Proceedings of the 11th IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference
Business Process Management: Concepts, Languages, Architectures
Business Process Management: Concepts, Languages, Architectures
Paving the Way to eGovernment Transformation: Interoperability Registry Infrastructure Development
EGOV '08 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Electronic Government
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Business to business interoperability: A current review of XML data integration standards
Computer Standards & Interfaces
Enterprise Architecture at Work: Modelling, Communication, and Analysis
Enterprise Architecture at Work: Modelling, Communication, and Analysis
Domain specific process modelling in public administrations: the PICTURE-approach
EGOV'07 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Electronic Government
Architectures for tinkering? contextual strategies towards interoperability in e-government
Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Pan-European policies envisioning a single European market and reduction of administrative burden call for effective, interoperable implementation and transformation of cross-border business-to-government services. Despite the existence of dedicated tools and methodologies that enable modelling and execution of cross-organizational business processes, a service-driven approach, that implies associating legal and business rules on the workflow, binding reusable documents with specific information exchanges among the stakeholders and extracting all-inclusive executable flows, remains to be adopted. In this context, the present paper outlines cross-dimensional patterns for modelling and transforming pan-European Business to Government Services interconnecting processes, data and rules under a common, cross-country prism. Such model-driven patterns foster interoperability on a conceptual and platform-independent basis. Discussion on the results is targeting best practices that can be drawn at research level and is pointing out the key difficulties that have to be tackled due to lack of enterprises' and public organizations' readiness in various countries.