Understanding e-Government project trajectories from an actor-network perspective

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Work data:

ISSN: 1469-5928

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https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/121515824/POST-PEER-REVIEW-NON-PUBLISHERS-libre.pdf?1740392929=&response-content-disposition=attachment;+filename=Understanding_e_Government_project_traje.pdf&Expires=1740398152&Signature=M4JVOQQknpKqB8Kz0PsLOeEsuzaoO4ehKoNkBtwdXMszFWicbj44EDQsdEsDmdDicC5FaM717I6s~KrN1eACxMcTBwvLltGeTt2aCFNvOXyDOuN~Ht3L6A2veCTleQloCBa4wDcL3SFKCNwJp4Ki2dpQvcwoV8Ft9rbLPV4AEGPikN

Type of work: Article (academic)

Categories:

e-Government & e-Administration

Tags:

actor-network

Abstract:

A number of models have been offered to help explain the trajectories of e-Government projects: their frequent failures and their rarer successes. Most, though, lack a sense of the political interaction of stakeholders that is fundamental to understanding the public sector. This paper draws on actor-network theory to provide a perspective that is used to explain the trajectory of an e-Government case study. This perspective is found to provide a valuable insight into the local and global actor-networks that surround e-Government projects. The mobilisation, interaction and disintegration of these networks underpins the course of such projects, and can itself be understood in relation to network actor power: not through a static conception of ‘power over’ others but through the dynamic-enacted concept of ‘power to’. As well as providing a research tool for analysis of e-Government project trajectories, the local/global networks approach also offers insights into e-Government leadership as a process of network formation and maintenance; and into the tensions between network stabilisation and design stabilisation.

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Full document:
Heeks, R. & Stanforth, C. (2007). “Understanding e-Government project trajectories from an actor-network perspective”. In European Journal of Information Systems, 16 (2), 165-177. Abingdon: Taylor & Francis.