default search action
Government Information Quarterly, Volume 32
Volume 32, Number 1, January 2015
- Frank Bannister, Regina Connolly:
The great theory hunt: Does e-government really have a problem? 1-11 - Teta Stamati, Thanos Papadopoulos, Dimosthenis Anagnostopoulos:
Social media for openness and accountability in the public sector: Cases in the Greek context. 12-29 - Fons Wijnhoven, Michel L. Ehrenhard, Johannes Kuhn:
Open government objectives and participation motivations. 30-42 - Byoung-Joon Kim:
Political efficacy, community collective efficacy, trust and extroversion in the information society: Differences between online and offline civic/political activities. 43-51 - Enrique Bonsón, Sonia Royo, Melinda Ratkai:
Citizens' engagement on local governments' Facebook sites. An empirical analysis: The impact of different media and content types in Western Europe. 52-62 - Anjali Kaushik, Aparna Raman:
The new data-driven enterprise architecture for e-healthcare: Lessons from the Indian public sector. 63-74 - Yong Jeong Yi:
Compliance of Section 508 in public library systems with the largest percentage of underserved populations. 75-81 - Haihe Jin, Jian Liang:
How should the Chinese government provide information services for Mongol ethnic minority? 82-94
- Amy Springer:
Public.Resource.Org [website]. Administered by Public.Resource.Org, 1005 Gravenstein Hwy. North, Sebastopol, CA 95472. January 14, 2014, from https: //public.resource.org/. 95-96 - Barbara Miller:
The Serial Set: Its Make-up and Content, Andrea Sevetson (Ed.). Proquest, Bethedsa (2013), ISBN: 978-1-60205-346-5. 96 - Maggie Farrell:
The ALA COL FDLP Task Force: Working through Association Processes (2014). 97-101
Volume 32, Number 2, April 2015
- Tomasz Janowski, Marijn Janssen:
Tribute to John Bertot and message from the incoming Editors-in-Chief. 103-104
- John Carlo Bertot, Jeffrey Seifert, Paul T. Jaeger:
Securing the homeland in the digital age: Issues and implications for policy and governance. 105-107 - Kevin Quigley, Calvin Burns, Kristen Stallard:
'Cyber Gurus': A rhetorical analysis of the language of cybersecurity specialists and the implications for security policy and critical infrastructure protection. 108-117 - Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Christopher G. Reddick, Uuf Brajawidagda:
Government surveillance disclosures, bilateral trust and Indonesia-Australia cross-border security cooperation: Social network analysis of Twitter data. 118-128 - Christopher G. Reddick, Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Patricia A. Jaramillo:
Public opinion on National Security Agency surveillance programs: A multi-method approach. 129-141
- Sotirios Koussouris, Fenareti Lampathaki, Panagiotis Kokkinakos, Dimitrios Askounis, Gianluca Misuraca:
Accelerating Policy Making 2.0: Innovation directions and research perspectives as distilled from four standout cases. 142-153 - Daniel Belanche-Gracia, Luis V. Casaló Ariño, Alfredo Pérez-Rueda:
Determinants of multi-service smartcard success for smart cities development: A study based on citizens' privacy and security perceptions. 154-163 - Brian E. Whitacre, Colin Rhinesmith:
Public libraries and residential broadband adoption: Do more computers lead to higher rates? 164-171 - Nripendra P. Rana, Yogesh Kumar Dwivedi:
Citizen's adoption of an e-government system: Validating extended social cognitive theory (SCT). 172-181 - Boriana Rukanova, Rolf T. Wigand, Eveline Van Stijn, Yao-Hua Tan:
Understanding transnational information systems with supranational governance: A multi-level conflict management perspective. 182-197 - Albert Meijer:
E-governance innovation: Barriers and strategies. 198-206 - Alexander van Loon, Dimiter Toshkov:
Adopting open source software in public administration: The importance of boundary spanners and political commitment. 207-215
- Xiaomeng Zhang:
Internetsociety.org [website]. Administered by the Internet Society, 1775 Wiehle Avenue, Suite 201, Reston, VA 20190-5108. Retrieved September 25, 2014, from http: //internetsociety.org. 216-217 - Debbie L. Rabina:
Strategic Narratives: Communication Power and the New World Order(Routledge Studies in Global Information, Politics, and Society). Alister Miskimmon, Ben O'Loughlin and Laura Roselle, Alister Miskimmon, Ben O'Loughlin, Laura Roselle. Routledge, New York & London (2013). 217-218 - Donna L. Burton:
Digital Dilemmas: Power, Resistance and the Internet, M.I. Franklin. Oxford University Press, New York (2013), ISBN: 9780199982707. 218-219 - Robbie Sittel:
Public Libraries, Public Policies, and Political Processes: Serving and Transforming Communities in Times of Economic and Political Constraint, Paul T. Jaeger, Ursula Gorham, John Carlo Bertot, Lindsay C. Sarin. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, MD (2014), ISBN: 978-1-4422-3346-1. 219-220
Volume 32, Number 3, July 2015
- Tomasz Janowski:
Digital government evolution: From transformation to contextualization. 221-236
- Albert Meijer, Victor Bekkers:
A metatheory of e-government: Creating some order in a fragmented research field. 237-245 - Tara Das:
Measuring scholarly use of government information: An altmetrics analysis of federal statistics. 246-252 - Sangki Jin, Cheong Moon Cho:
Is ICT a new essential for national economic growth in an information society? 253-260 - Brian E. Whitacre, Sharon Strover, Roberto Gallardo:
How much does broadband infrastructure matter? Decomposing the metro-non-metro adoption gap with the help of the National Broadband Map. 261-269 - Sebastian Stier:
Political determinants of e-government performance revisited: Comparing democracies and autocracies. 270-278 - Antonio Cordella, Niccoló Tempini:
E-government and organizational change: Reappraising the role of ICT and bureaucracy in public service delivery. 279-286 - Tommaso Federici, Alessio Maria Braccini, Øystein Sæbø:
'Gentlemen, all aboard!' ICT and party politics: Reflections from a Mass-eParticipation experience. 287-298 - Azi Lev-On, Nili Steinfeld:
Local engagement online: Municipal Facebook pages as hubs of interaction. 299-307 - Renée E. Sieber, Peter A. Johnson:
Civic open data at a crossroads: Dominant models and current challenges. 308-315 - Nik Thompson, Ravi Ravindran, Salvatore Nicosia:
Government data does not mean data governance: Lessons learned from a public sector application audit. 316-322 - Rui Pedro Lourenço:
An analysis of open government portals: A perspective of transparency for accountability. 323-332 - Staci M. Zavattaro, P. Edward French, Somya D. Mohanty:
A sentiment analysis of U.S. local government tweets: The connection between tone and citizen involvement. 333-341 - Philip Doty:
U.S. homeland security and risk assessment. 342-352 - Kyujin Jung, Han Woo Park:
A semantic (TRIZ) network analysis of South Korea's "Open Public Data" policy. 353-358
- Andrew Lopez:
The persistence of innovation in government. 359 - Dana Jackson-Hardwick:
Secrecy in the Sunshine Era: The promises and failures of U.S. open government laws. 360 - Stephanie Braunstein:
DIGITALGOV.gov [website]. Administered by the General Services Administration's Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, 1800 F Street, Washington, DC 20405. Online material discussed in this review retrieved April 2015 from http: //www.digitalgov.gov/. 360-361 - Antonio Cordella:
The Circulation of Agency in E-Justice: Interoperability and Infrastructure for European Transborder Judicial Proceedings, Francesco Contini, Giovan Francesco Lanzara (Eds.). Springer, New York and London (2014), 365. 361 - Aimée C. Quinn:
Privacy in the age of big data: Recognizing threats, defending your rights, and protecting your familyForward by the Honorable Howard A. Schmidt, Theresa M. Payton, Theodore Claypoole. Rowan & Littlefield, Lanham, MD (2014). 362
Volume 32, Number 4, October 2015
- Marijn Janssen, Jeroen van den Hoven:
Big and Open Linked Data (BOLD) in government: A challenge to transparency and privacy? 363-368
- Nadine Strauß, Sanne Kruikemeier, Heleen van der Meulen, Guda van Noort:
Digital diplomacy in GCC countries: Strategic communication of Western embassies on Twitter. 369-379 - Christian Østergaard Madsen, Pernille Kræmmergaard:
The efficiency of freedom: Single parents' domestication of mandatory e-government channels. 380-388 - Anteneh Ayanso, Kaveepan Lertwachara:
An analytics approach to exploring the link between ICT development and affordability. 389-398 - Judie Attard, Fabrizio Orlandi, Simon Scerri, Sören Auer:
A systematic review of open government data initiatives. 399-418 - Frank L. K. Ohemeng, Kwaku Ofosu-Adarkwa:
One way traffic: The open data initiative project and the need for an effective demand side initiative in Ghana. 419-428 - Anneke Zuiderwijk, Marijn Janssen, Yogesh Kumar Dwivedi:
Acceptance and use predictors of open data technologies: Drawing upon the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology. 429-440 - Felipe Gonzalez-Zapata, Richard Heeks:
The multiple meanings of open government data: Understanding different stakeholders and their perspectives. 441-452 - Emad A. Abu-Shanab:
Reengineering the open government concept: An empirical support for a proposed model. 453-463 - Ines Mergel:
Open collaboration in the public sector: The case of social coding on GitHub. 464-472 - Uthayasankar Sivarajah, Zahir Irani, Vishanth Weerakkody:
Evaluating the use and impact of Web 2.0 technologies in local government. 473-487 - Whasun Jho, Kyong Jae Song:
Institutional and technological determinants of civil e-Participation: Solo or duet? 488-495 - Rianne Dekker, Victor Bekkers:
The contingency of governments' responsiveness to the virtual public sphere: A systematic literature review and meta-synthesis. 496-505 - Alex Ingrams:
Mobile phones, smartphones, and the transformation of civic behavior through mobile information and connectivity. 506-515 - Lieselot Danneels, Stijn Viaene:
Simple rules strategy to transform government: An ADR approach. 516-525 - Godwin Thomas, Reinhardt A. Botha, Darell van Greunen:
Understanding the problem of coordination in a large scale distributed environment from a service lens view - Towards the South African public sector e-Administration criteria for coordination support. 526-538
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.