ICT, Public Administration and Democracy in the Coming Decade ( Innovation and the Public Sector )

Publication series :Innovation and the Public Sector

Author: Meijer > A. J.;Bannister 3 > F.;Thaens 4 > M.  

Publisher: Ios Press‎

Publication year: 2013

E-ISBN: 9781614992448

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781614992431

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9781614992431

Subject: D0 Political Theory

Keyword: 政治理论

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Chapter

Contents

The Information Polity: Towards a Two Speed Future?

The Information Polity: Towards a Two Speed Future?

E-Government Is Dead: Long Live Public Administration 2.0

E-Government Is Dead: Long Live Public Administration 2.0

Surveillance as X-Ray

Surveillance as X-Ray

Section 2. The Future Implications of E-Government for Government Institutions

Section 2. The Future Implications of E-Government for Government Institutions

Towards a Smart State? Inter-Agency Collaboration, Information Integration, and Beyond

Towards a Smart State? Inter-Agency Collaboration, Information Integration, and Beyond

The Social Media Innovation Challenge in the Public Sector

The Social Media Innovation Challenge in the Public Sector

A Good Man but a Bad Wizard. About the Limits and Future of Transparency of Democratic Governments

A Good Man but a Bad Wizard. About the Limits and Future of Transparency of Democratic Governments

The Do It Yourself State - The Future of Participatory Democracy

The Do It Yourself State - The Future of Participatory Democracy

Section 3. The Future Implications for Our E-Government Research and Practice

Section 3. The Future Implications for Our E-Government Research and Practice

Five Trends That Matter: Challenges to 21st Century Electronic Government

Five Trends That Matter: Challenges to 21st Century Electronic Government

Why Does E-Government Look as It Does? Looking Beyond the Explanatory Emptiness of the E-Government Concept

Why Does E-Government Look as It Does? Looking Beyond the Explanatory Emptiness of the E-Government Concept

Big Questions of E-Government Research

Big Questions of E-Government Research

The users who browse this book also browse