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Government Information Quarterly, Volume 27
Volume 27, Number 1, January 2010
- Jane Fedorowicz, Martin A. Dias:
A decade of design in digital government research. 1-8 - John A. Shuler, Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot:
Implications of harmonizing the future of the federal depository library program within e-government principles and policies. 9-16 - Enrico Ferro, Maddalena Sorrentino:
Can intermunicipal collaboration help the diffusion of E-Government in peripheral areas? Evidence from Italy. 17-25 - Wade R. Rose, Gerald G. Grant:
Critical issues pertaining to the planning and implementation of E-Government initiatives. 26-33 - Dave Gelders, Øyvind Ihlen:
Minding the gap: Applying a service marketing model into government policy communications. 34-40 - Devendra Dilip Potnis:
Measuring e-Governance as an innovation in the public sector. 41-48 - Jensen J. Zhao, Sherry Y. Zhao:
Opportunities and threats: A security assessment of state e-government websites. 49-56 - Luis Fernando Ramos Simón, Iuliana Botezan:
The path to information in the public domain: Official publications in Spain. 57-62 - Mohammad Sharifi, Amir Manian:
The study of the success indicators for pre-implementation activities of Iran's E-Government development projects. 63-69 - Vassilis Meneklis, Christos Douligeris:
Bridging theory and practice in e-government: A set of guidelines for architectural design. 70-81 - Antonio Cordella, Leslie P. Willcocks:
Outsourcing, bureaucracy and public value: Reappraising the notion of the "contract state". 82-88 - Nixon Muganda Ochara:
Assessing irreversibility of an E-Government project in Kenya: Implication for governance. 89-97 - Marije L. Teerling, Willem Pieterson:
Multichannel marketing: An experiment on guiding citizens to the electronic channels. 98-107
- Donna L. Burton:
Department of Homeland Security Website. Administered by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Washington, DC 20528. Retrieved August 2009, from http: //www.dhs.gov/. 108-109 - Karen Hogenboom:
Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power, David Rothkopf (Ed.). Public Affairs, New York (2006). 109 - Barbara Miller:
Electronic Government, Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications. Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko, Ed. New York: Information Science Reference, 2008, 4, 780 pp. $1950.00, ISBN 978-1-59904-947-2. Online access only: $1850.00. 109-110 - Cynthia Thomes:
Office of Scientific and Technical Information. Administered by OSTI, 1 Science.gov Way, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. Retrieved December 31, 2008, from http: //www.osti.gov. 110-111 - Claudene Sproles:
USA.gov. Administered by The Office of Citizen Services and Communications, U.S. General Services Administration, 1800 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20405. Retrieved December 23, 2008, from http: //www.usa.gov/. 111-112
Volume 27, Number 2, March 2010
- Albert Meijer, Marcel Thaens:
Alignment 2.0: Strategic use of new internet technologies in government. 113-121 - Marta Raus, Jianwei Liu, Alexander Kipp:
Evaluating IT innovations in a business-to-government context: A framework and its applications. 122-133 - Dave Gelders, Marleen Brans, Jeroen Maesschalck, Nathalie Colsoul:
Systematic evaluation of public participation projects: Analytical framework and application based on two Belgian neighborhood watch projects. 134-140 - Joanne M. Kuzma:
Accessibility design issues with UK e-government sites. 141-146 - Dong-Hee Shin:
Convergence and divergence: Policy making about the convergence of technology in Korea. 147-160 - Abebe Rorissa, Dawit Demissie:
An analysis of African e-Government service websites. 161-169 - C. Nadine Wathen, Sandra McKeown:
Can the government really help? Online information for women experiencing violence. 170-176 - Robin Gauld, Shaun Goldfinch, Simon Horsburgh:
Do they want it? Do they use it? The 'Demand-Side' of e-Government in Australia and New Zealand. 177-186 - Jun Xia:
Linking ICTs to rural development: China's rural information policy. 187-195 - Chun-Shuo Chen, Terrence A. Maxwell:
Three decades of bilateral copyright negotiations: Mainland China and the United States. 196-207
- Ben Amata:
Milestone Documents in American History: Exploring the Primary Sources that Shaped America, Paul Finkelman, Bruce A. Lesch (Eds.). Dallas, TX: Schlager Group (2008), ISBN: 9780979775802. 208 - Debbie L. Rabina:
M-libraries: Libraries on the Move to Provide Virtual Access. Gill Needham, Mohamed Ally (Eds.). London: Facet Publishing, 2008, 287 pp. $125.00, ISBN 978-1-85604-648-0. 208-209 - Edward O'Donnell:
Government Transparency 2.0: An Internet Evolution/InformationWeek Editorial WebinarSponsored by IBM Presenters Mary Hayes Weier, Editor at Large, Information Week and Monica McEwen, Regional Manager, Federal IBM, BI/PM (Formerly Cognos) (2009). 209-210 - Bert Chapman:
The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One, 346, David Kilcullen. Oxford University Press, New York (2009). 210 - Roger Anderson:
Space Warfare and Defense, a Historical Encyclopedia and Research Guide. Bert Chapman. Santa Barbara, CA.: ABC-Clio, 2008. xxx, 403 pp. $95.00, ISBN 1-59884-006-1 (cloth). Also available as an e-book, ISBN 1-59884-007-X. 210-212
Volume 27, Number 3, July 2010
- Jurjen Jansen, Sjoerd de Vries, Paul van Schaik:
The Contextual Benchmark Method: Benchmarking e-Government services. 213-219 - Jungwoo Lee:
10 year retrospect on stage models of e-Government: A qualitative meta-synthesis. 220-230 - Laura McCarthy, Dave Yates:
The use of cookies in Federal agency web sites: Privacy and recordkeeping issues. 231-237 - Ardion Beldad, Menno de Jong, Michaël F. Steehouder:
Reading the least read? Indicators of users' intention to consult privacy statements on municipal websites. 238-244 - Scott Paquette, Paul T. Jaeger, Susan Copeland Wilson:
Identifying the security risks associated with governmental use of cloud computing. 245-253 - Marieke Welle Donker-Kuijer, Menno de Jong, Leo Lentz:
Usable guidelines for usable websites? An analysis of five e-government heuristics. 254-263 - John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger, Justin M. Grimes:
Using ICTs to create a culture of transparency: E-government and social media as openness and anti-corruption tools for societies. 264-271 - Charles D. Bernholz:
Standardized American Indians: The "Names of Indian tribes and bands" list from the Office of Indian Affairs. 272-279 - Lauren H. Mandel, Bradley Wade Bishop, Charles R. McClure, John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger:
Broadband for public libraries: Importance, issues, and research needs. 280-291 - Chi-Shiou Lin, Kristin R. Eschenfelder:
Librarian-initiated publications discovery: How do digital depository librarians discover and select web-based government publications for state digital depositories? 292-304
- Edward O'Donnell:
Web 2.0 and the Federal Government: A Webinar Sponsored by Center for American Progress, June 1, 2009, 12: 00 pm-1: 30 pm. http: //www.americanprogress.org/events/2009/06/web20.html. 305-306 - Emily Keller:
Sunshine Week 2010 National Dialogue Webcast: Building Transparency. Sponsored by Free Government Information (FGI), March 19, 2010, 12-2 p.m. EST, http: //freegovinfo.info/. 306 - Debbie L. Rabina:
Limiting Knowledge in a Democracy: A Social Research Conference at the New School. The New School, Feb 24-27, 2010. Conference Review, http: //www.newschool.edu/centers/socres/limitingknowledge/. 306-308 - Claudene Sproles:
State of the eUnion: Government 2.0 and Onwards. John Gøtze, Christian Bering Pedersen (Eds.), Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2009, 332 pp. ISBN-13: 978-1449047290. Retrieved February 13, 2010, from http: //21gov.net.nmsrv.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/e-book.pdf. Managed by 21Gov.net, Copenhagen, Denmark. 308 - Karen Hogenboom:
Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency, Archon Fung, Mary Graham, David Weil. Cambridge University Press, New York (2008). 309
Volume 27, Number 4, October 2010
- Patrick Birkinshaw:
Freedom of information and its impact in the United Kingdom. 312-321 - Vikki Gordon:
National Security Directive declassification. 322-328 - Jonathan Lazar, Paul T. Jaeger, Anthony Adams, Anthony Angelozzi, John Manohar, James Marciniak, Justin Murphy, Pouria Norasteh, Charles Olsen, Evangelos Poneres, Tiffany Scott, Naresh Vaidya, James Walsh:
Up in the air: Are airlines following the new DOT rules on equal pricing for people with disabilities when websites are inaccessible? 329-336 - Elizabeth Shepherd, Alice Stevenson, Andrew Flinn:
Information governance, records management, and freedom of information: A study of local government authorities in England. 337-345 - Weibing Xiao:
China's limited push model of FOI legislation. 346-351 - Robert Hazell, Ben Worthy:
Assessing the performance of freedom of information. 352-359 - Jeannine E. Relly, David Cuillier:
A comparison of political, cultural, and economic indicators of access to information in Arab and non-Arab states. 360-370 - Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot:
Transparency and technological change: Ensuring equal and sustained public access to government information. 371-376 - Sharon S. Dawes:
Stewardship and usefulness: Policy principles for information-based transparency. 377-383 - Philip M. Napoli, Joe Karaganis:
On making public policy with publicly available data: The case of U.S. communications policymaking. 384-391 - Tom McClean:
Who pays the piper? The political economy of freedom of information. 392-400 - Patrice McDermott:
Building open government. 401-413
- Harold C. Relyea:
Across the Hill: The congressional research service and providing research for congress - A retrospective on origins. 414-422 - Isabel Gallego Álvarez, Luis Rodríguez Domínguez, Isabel María García Sánchez:
Are determining factors of municipal E-government common to a worldwide municipal view? An intra-country comparison. 423-430 - Lihua Yang, Zhiyong Lan:
Internet's impact on expert-citizen interactions in public policymaking - A meta analysis. 431-441
- Denise Arial Dorris:
Free Government Information (FGI) Website. Retrieved June 15, 2010 from http: //freegovinfo.info/. 442 - Barbara Miller:
Wiki Government: How Technology Can Make Government Better, Democracy Stronger, and Citizens More Powerful. Beth Simone Noveck. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2009. ($28.95). 442-443 - Cynthia Thomes:
The Privacy Advocates: Resisting the Spread of Surveillance. Colin J. Bennett. Cambridge, MA and London. The MIT Press, 2008, 259 pp. $28 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-262-02638-3. 443-444 - Bert Chapman:
Spying Blind: The CIA, the FBI, and the Origins of 9/11, Amy B. Zegart. Princeton University Press, Princeton (2007). 444-445 - Gretchen Gano:
Managing Electronic Government Information in Libraries: Issues and Practices, Andrea M. Morrison (Ed.). American Library Association, Chicago (2009). 445
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