Government Information Quarterly
Citation:
Government Information Quarterly . London: Elsevier. http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/620202/description
Work data:
ISSN: 0740-624XType of work: Journal
Categories:
e-Government | ICT Infrastructure | Politics and Political ScienceAbstract:
Government Information Quarterly is a cross-disciplinary and refereed journal that covers information and telecommunications policy, information management, information technology planning and management, and e-government practices, policies and issues relevant to all levels of government within the United States and abroad. Individual issues contain an editorial, articles, and reviews. The articles analyze current information policies and practices, present new developments, provide theoretical and philosophical treatises, and discuss current issues and strategies for managing government information-based services and resources.Includes
- Mueller, M. (1999) Universal Service Policies as Wealth Redistribution
- Helbig, N., Gil-García, J. R. & Ferro, E. (2009) Understanding the complexity of electronic government: Implications from the digital divide literature
- Çilan, . A., Bolat, B. A. & Coşkun, E. (2008) Analyzing digital divide within and between member and candidate countries of European Union
- Kim, E., Lee, B. & Menon, N. M. (forthcoming) Social welfare implications of the digital divide
- Verdegem, P. & Verleye, G. (2009) User-centered E-Government in practice: A comprehensive model for measuring user satisfaction
- van Deursen, A. & van Dijk, J. (2009) Improving digital skills for the use of online public information and services
- Yang, L. & Zhiyong Lan, G. (2010) Internet’s impact on expert–citizen interactions in public policymaking—A meta analysis
- Relly, J. E. & Cuillier, D. (2010) A comparison of political, cultural, and economic indicators of access to information in Arab and non-Arab states
- Gallego-Álvarez, I., Rodríguez-Domínguez, L. & García-Sánchez, I. (2010) Are determining factors of municipal E-government common to a worldwide municipal view? An intra-country comparison
- Muñoz-Cañavate, A. & Hípola, P. (2011) Electronic administration in Spain: From its beginnings to the present
- Lee, J., Kim, H. J. & Ahn, M. J. (2011) The willingness of e-Government service adoption by business users: The role of offline service quality and trust in technology
- Lin, F., Fofanah, S. S. & Liang, D. (2011) Assessing citizen adoption of e-Government initiativesnext term in Gambia: A validation of the technology acceptance model in information systems success
- Layne, K. & Lee, J. (2001) Developing fullynext term functional previous termE-government: A four stage modelnext term
- Ferro, E., Helbig, N. & Gil-García, J. R. (2011) The role of IT literacy in defining digital divide policy needs
- Heeks, R. & Bailur, S. (2007) Analyzing e-government research: Perspectives, philosophies, theories, methods, and practice
- Karunasena, K. & Deng, H. (2012) Critical factors for evaluating the public value of e-government in Sri Lanka
- Åström, J., Karlsson, M. , Linde, J. & Pirannejad, A. (2012) Understanding the rise of e-participation in non-democracies: Domestic and international factors
- Sandoval-Almazan, R. & Gil-García, J. R. (2012) Are government internet portals evolving towards more interaction, participation, and collaboration? Revisiting the rhetoric of e-government among municipalities
- Yuan, L., Xi, C. & Xiaoyi, W. (2012) Evaluating the readiness of government portal websites in China to adopt contemporary public administration principles
- Powell, A., Williams, C. K. , Bock, D. S. , Doellman, T. & Allen, J. (2012) e-Voting intent: A comparison of young and elderly voters
- Susha, I. & Grönlund, . (2012) eParticipation research: Systematizing the field
- Medaglia, R. (2012) eParticipation research: Moving characterization forward (2006–2011)
- DeMaagd, K., Chew, H. E. , Huang, G. , Khan, M. L. , Sreenivasan, A. & LaRose, R. (2012) The use of public computing facilities by library patrons: Demography, motivations, and barriers



