Building the Virtual State: Information Technology and Institutional Change
Building the Virtual State: Information Technology and Institutional Change
The Future of E-Government: A Project of Potential Trends and Issues
HICSS '03 Proceedings of the 36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'03) - Track 5 - Volume 5
Reflections on the eGovRTD2020 roadmap for e-government research
Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Theory and practice of electronic governance
The Myths of E-Government: Looking Beyond the Assumptions of a New and Better Government
The Information Society
Evaluating the progress of e-government development: A critical analysis
Information Polity
The perspective of Janus: Reflecting on EGPA past and future
Information Polity - Reflections on ICT in Public Administration from the European Group on Public Administration
Why don't they listen to us? Reasserting the role of ICT in Public Administration
Information Polity - Reflections on ICT in Public Administration from the European Group on Public Administration
Information Polity - Reflections on ICT in Public Administration from the European Group on Public Administration
The EGPA Study Group at 20: Reflections backwards, forwards, and sideways
Information Polity - Reflections on ICT in Public Administration from the European Group on Public Administration
Ten years of e-government: the 'end of history' and new beginning
EGOV'10 Proceedings of the 9th IFIP WG 8.5 international conference on Electronic government
The organisation and coordination of european e-government research for the EU in 2010
EGOV'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Electronic Government
Towards a network government? a critical analysis of current assessment methods for e-government
EGOV'07 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Electronic Government
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Taking stock of an area of study and determining potential venues for further contributions by asking challenging big questions have been popular in the discipline of public administration for the last two decades. This has been done through asking "big questions", which aim to encourage thinking "out of the box", without attempting to provide a corresponding set of definitive "big answers". Examples abound, such as articles published on the big questions of public management, public administration education, and public network management research. This chapter argues for the necessity of "a big question approach" in e-government research. The big questions being posed here originate from a review of the e-government research; and they benefit from several reviews of the e-government literature and by other developments in and around the public administration discipline as they pertain to e-government. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the emergent topics and issues in e-government research and practice; as well as an evaluation of the relevance of the proposed big questions for the deepening and widening of e-government research in the years to come.