Database nation: the death of privacy in the 21st century
Database nation: the death of privacy in the 21st century
Doing critical IS research: the question of methodology
Qualitative research in IS
Building Effective Online Marketplaces with Institution-Based Trust
Information Systems Research
A Research Model for Studying Privacy Concerns Pertaining to Location-Based Services
HICSS '05 Proceedings of the Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 07
What Trust Means in E-Commerce Customer Relationships: An Interdisciplinary Conceptual Typology
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Modeling users' acceptance of mobile services
Electronic Commerce Research
Towards a Conceptual Model of User Acceptance of Location-Based Emergency Services
International Journal of Ambient Computing and Intelligence
A countermeasure against wormhole attacks in MANETs using analytical hierarchy process methodology
Electronic Commerce Research
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Mobile alerts, notifications and location-based emergency warning systems are now an established part of mobile government strategies in an increasing number of countries worldwide. In Australia the national emergency warning system (NEWS) was instituted after the tragic Black Saturday Victorian Bushfires of February 2009. NEWS has enabled the provision of public information from the government to the citizen during emergencies anywhere and any time. Moving on from traditional short message service (SMS) notifications and cell broadcasting to more advanced location-based services, this paper explores the major issues faced by government, business and society at large, toward the realization of a fully fledged emergency system for personal mobile devices. This qualitative study contains two phases: phase 1 gathered issues from the general public via an open-ended survey question, and phase 2 gathered issues from key informant interviews. The data was analyzed using qualitative content analysis techniques. The results are presented in a narrative form granting detailed insight into the main challenges faced in the deployment of a mobile government application. The complex interplay between government agencies, telecommunications carriers and the Australian public is presented, ultimately leading down a path of regulation. By using a qualitative approach it is hoped that the intimate lessons learnt in the Australian landscape can be applied to other nations considering mobile government applications. The outcome of the paper is predominantly practical providing a series of recommendations toward the successful deployment of mobile government applications.