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Government Information Quarterly, Volume 29
Volume 29, Number 1, January 2012
- Christopher G. Reddick, Michael Turner:
Channel choice and public service delivery in Canada: Comparing e-government to traditional service delivery. 1-11 - Taewoo Nam:
Suggesting frameworks of citizen-sourcing via Government 2.0. 12-20 - Albert Meijer, Stephan G. Grimmelikhuijsen, Gijs Jan Brandsma:
Communities of Public Service Support: Citizens engage in social learning in peer-to-peer networks. 21-29 - John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger, Derek L. Hansen:
The impact of polices on government social media usage: Issues, challenges, and recommendations. 30-40 - Ardion Beldad, Thea van der Geest, Menno de Jong, Michaël F. Steehouder:
A cue or two and I'll trust you: Determinants of trust in government organizations in terms of their processing and usage of citizens' personal information disclosed online. 41-49 - Krishna Jayakar, Eun-A Park:
Funding public computing centers: Balancing broadband availability and expected demand. 50-59 - Inger Brännström:
Gender and digital divide 2000-2008 in two low-income economies in Sub-Saharan Africa: Kenya and Somalia in official statistics. 60-67 - Andrew Whitmore:
A statistical analysis of the construction of the United Nations E-Government Development Index. 68-75 - Kanishka Karunasena, Hepu Deng:
Critical factors for evaluating the public value of e-government in Sri Lanka. 76-84 - Chun Liu:
The myth of informatization in rural areas: The case of China's Sichuan province. 85-97 - Xenia Papadomichelaki, Gregoris Mentzas:
e-GovQual: A multiple-item scale for assessing e-government service quality. 98-109
- Debbie L. Rabina:
E-Government: Information, Technology, and Transformation, Volume 17, Hans J. Scholl, in: AMIS (Advances in Management Information Systems). M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY (2010), ISBN: 978-0-7656-1989-1. 110-111 - Ben Amata:
OpenSecrets.org. Managed by the Center for Responsive Politics, 1101 14th St., NW Suite 1030 Washington, DC 20005-5635. Retrieved September 07, 2011, from http: //www.opensecrets.org/index.php. 111 - Emily Keller:
Governing Electronically: E-Government and the Reconfiguration of Public Administration, Policy and Power, Paul Henman. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire; New York (2010), ISBN: 9780230205888. 111-112 - Barbie Selby:
Google eBookstore/GPO Partnership. Administered by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 732 North Capitol Street, NW, Washington, DC 20401 and Google, Inc., 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043. Retrieved September 9, 2011 from http: //books.google.com/ebooks. 112-113 - Benjamin J. Keele:
Patent Reform in the 112th Congress: Innovation Issues. Wendy H. Schacht and John R. Thomas. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service, June 30, 2011, 38 pp. R41638. 113
Volume 29, Number Supplement-1, January 2012
Editorial
- Tomasz Janowski, Theresa A. Pardo, Jim Davies:
Government Information Networks - Mapping Electronic Governance cases through Public Administration concepts. S1-S10
- Hang Yu, Siddharth Taduri, Jay P. Kesan, Gloria T. Lau, Kincho H. Law:
Mining information across multiple domains: A case study of application to patent laws and regulations in biotechnology. S11-S21 - Ralf Klischewski, Eman Askar:
Linking service development methods to interoperability governance: The case of Egypt. S22-S31 - André Andrade, Luiz Antonio Joia:
Organizational structure and ICT strategies in the Brazilian Judiciary System. S32-S42 - Gastón Concha, Hernán Astudillo, Miguel Porrua, Carlos Pimenta:
E-Government procurement observatory, maturity model and early measurements. S43-S50 - Tung-Mou Yang, Lei Zheng, Theresa A. Pardo:
The boundaries of information sharing and integration: A case study of Taiwan e-Government. S51-S60 - Yiwei Gong, Marijn Janssen:
From policy implementation to business process management: Principles for creating flexibility and agility. S61-S71 - Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán, J. Ramón Gil-García:
Are government internet portals evolving towards more interaction, participation, and collaboration? Revisiting the rhetoric of e-government among municipalities. S72-S81 - Gopal Naik, Siddharth Joshi, K. P. Basavaraj:
Fostering inclusive growth through e-Governance Embedded Rural Telecenters (EGERT) in India. S82-S89 - Taewoo Nam:
Dual effects of the internet on political activism: Reinforcing and mobilizing. S90-S97 - Fang Wang, Yongbo Chen:
From potential users to actual users: Use of e-government service by Chinese migrant farmer workers. S98-S111 - Sharon S. Dawes, Mohammed A. Gharawi, G. Brian Burke:
Transnational public sector knowledge networks: Knowledge and information sharing in a multi-dimensional context. S112-S120 - Gianluca Misuraca, David Broster, Clara Centeno:
Digital Europe 2030: Designing scenarios for ICT in future governance and policy making. S121-S131
Volume 29, Number 2, April 2012
- Sukumar Ganapati, Christopher G. Reddick:
Open e-government in U.S. state governments: Survey evidence from Chief Information Officers. 115-122 - Enrique Bonsón, Lourdes Torres, Sonia Royo, Francisco Flores-Muñoz:
Local e-government 2.0: Social media and corporate transparency in municipalities. 123-132 - Anja Reinwald, Pernille Kræmmergaard:
Managing stakeholders in transformational government - A case study in a Danish local government. 133-141 - Joachim Åström, Martin Karlsson, Jonas Linde, Ali Pirannejad:
Understanding the rise of e-participation in non-democracies: Domestic and international factors. 142-150 - Andrew Whitmore:
Extracting knowledge from U.S. department of defense freedom of information act requests with social media. 151-157 - Fredrik Karlsson, Jesper Holgersson, Eva Söderström, Karin Hedström:
Exploring user participation approaches in public e-service development. 158-168 - Chien-leng Hsu, Han Woo Park:
Mapping online social networks of Korean politicians. 169-181 - Vagia Kyriakidou, Christos Michalakelis, Thomas Sphicopoulos:
Utilization of communications network potential: Public practices and effects. 182-191 - Panagiotis Panagiotopoulos, Mutaz M. Al-Debei, Guy Fitzgerald, Tony Elliman:
A business model perspective for ICTs in public engagement. 192-202 - Hossana Twinomurinzi, Jackie Phahlamohlaka, Elaine Byrne:
The small group subtlety of using ICT for participatory governance: A South African experience. 203-211 - Miguel Rios-Berrios, Puneet Sharma, Tak Yeon Lee, Rachel Schwartz, Ben Shneiderman:
TreeCovery: Coordinated dual treemap visualization for exploring the Recovery Act. 212-222 - Awalin Sopan, Angela Song-Ie Noh, Sohit Karol, Paul Rosenfeld, Ginnah Lee, Ben Shneiderman:
Community Health Map: A geospatial and multivariate data visualization tool for public health datasets. 223-234 - I-Chiu Chang, Yi-Chang Li, Teng-Yen Wu, David C. Yen:
Electronic medical record quality and its impact on user satisfaction - Healthcare providers' point of view. 235-242 - Dong-Hee Shin, Eun-Kyung Han:
How will net neutrality be played out in Korea? 243-251 - Robert A. Staley:
American Indian treaty diplomacy in the Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789. 252-260 - Frank A. G. den Butter, Jianwei Liu, Yao-Hua Tan:
Using IT to engender trust in government-to-business relationships: The Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) as an example. 261-274 - Harold C. Relyea:
Across the Hill: The congressional research service and providing research for congress - A retrospective on personal experience. 275-280
- George D. Barnum, August A. Imholtz Jr., Harold C. Relyea, Donald A. Ritchie:
Congress as publisher: Three perspectives. 281-282 - Donald A. Ritchie:
Private printers and the party press: What went on before the GPO. 283-284 - August A. Imholtz Jr.:
Congress as Publisher: The magic of the U.S. Congressional Serial Set. 285-290 - Harold C. Relyea:
Congress as publisher: Politics, institutions, and policy. 291-293
- John Carlo Bertot, Paul T. Jaeger, John A. Shuler:
Building the scholarship of next generation information professional. 294-295 - Lawrence J. Mello Jr.:
Travel.State.Gov. Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, 2201 C Street, NW, Washington, DC 20520. Retrieved February 23, 2012, from http: //travel.state.gov/. 296-297 - Michelle Donlin:
Travel.State.Gov. Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, 2201 C Street, NW Washington, DC 20520. Retrieved February 24, 2012, from http: //travel.state.gov/. 297-299 - Ruth Lincoln:
National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S Department of Health and Human Services, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892. Retrieved February 23, 2012, from http: //nih.gov/. 299-301 - Andy Bourgeois:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892. 301-303 - Alison Regan:
Healthfinder.gov. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. P.O. Box 1133, Washington, DC 20013-1133. Retrieved February 24, 2012, from http: //healthfinder.gov/. 303-304 - Kim Larson:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1600 Clifton Rd. Atlanta, GA 30333. Retrieved February 24, 2012, from http: //www.cdc.gov/. 304-305 - Eva Wolfberg:
Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Ave, SW, Washington, DC 20202. Retrieved February 23, 2012, from http: //www.fafsa.ed.gov/. 305-306
- Benjamin J. Keele:
Office of E-Government and Information Technology. Administered by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. New Executive Office Building, Washington DC 20503. Retrieved November 12, 2011, from http: //www.whitehouse.gov/omb/e-gov/. 307 - Robbie Sittel:
Managed by the Information Policy & Access Center (iPAC) in the College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland. 307-308 - Debbie L. Rabina:
Access to Knowledge in the Age of Intellectual Property. Gaëlle Krikorian and Amy Kapczynski (Eds). New York: Zone Books, 2010, 646pp. $24.95 (paper), ISBN: 978-1-890951-96-2. 308-309 - Claudene Sproles:
Government Is Us 2.0, Cheryl Simrell King (Ed.). M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY (2011), ISBN: 978-0-7656-2501-4. 309-310 - Julia Proctor:
How Information Matters: Networks and Public Policy Innovation. Kathleen Hale. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2011, 230 pp. $29.95 (Paper), ISBN: 978-1589017009. 310
- Tomasz Janowski, Theresa A. Pardo, Jim Davies:
Erratum to "Government Information Networks - Mapping Electronic Governance cases through Public Administration concepts" [Government Information Quarterly 29S1 (2012) 1-10]. 311
Volume 29, Number 3, July 2012
- Hans Jochen Scholl, Herbert Kubicek, Ralf Cimander, Ralf Klischewski:
Process integration, information sharing, and system interoperation in government: A comparative case analysis. 313-323 - Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes, J. Ramón Gil-García, Georgina Romero:
Towards a multidimensional model for evaluating electronic government: Proposing a more comprehensive and integrative perspective. 324-334 - Jeannine E. Relly:
Examining a model of vertical accountability: A cross-national study of the influence of information access on the control of corruption. 335-345 - Rony Medaglia:
eParticipation research: Moving characterization forward (2006-2011). 346-360 - Anne Powell, Clay K. Williams, Douglas B. Bock, Thomas Doellman, Jason Allen:
e-Voting intent: A comparison of young and elderly voters. 361-372 - Iryna Susha, Åke Grönlund:
eParticipation research: Systematizing the field. 373-382 - Sanne Elling, Leo Lentz, Menno de Jong, Huub van den Bergh:
Measuring the quality of governmental websites in a controlled versus an online setting with the 'Website Evaluation Questionnaire'. 383-393 - Hyeon-Suk Lyu:
Internet policy in Korea: A preliminary framework for assigning moral and legal responsibility to agents in internet activities. 394-402 - Yuan Liu, Xi Chen, Xiaoyi Wang:
Evaluating the readiness of government portal websites in China to adopt contemporary public administration principles. 403-412 - Agneta Ranerup:
The socio-material pragmatics of e-governance mobilization. 413-423 - Harold C. Relyea:
Across the hill: The congressional research service and providing research for congress - Considering the future. 424-428
- Sarah Shuler:
Medicare.gov. Administered by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Blvd., Baltimore, MD 21244. Retrieved April 15, 2012, from http: //www.medicare.gov/. 429-430 - Abigail J. McDermott, Janet C. Norton:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd., Atlanta, GA 30333. 430-433 - Christine McMahon:
Floridashealth.com. 433-434 - Elizabeth Ann Bowen:
HHS.gov, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 200 Independence Avenue, S.W. Washington, DC, 20201. Retrieved April 10, 2012, from http: //www.hhs.gov/. 434-435
- James Jacobs:
LOCKSS-USDOCS Program. Managed by Stanford University Libraries, 1450 Page Mill Road, Stanford, CA 94305. Retrieved September 06, 2011 from http: //lockss-usdocs.stanford.edu. 436-437 - Karen Hogenboom:
Congress vs. the Bureaucracy: Muzzling Agency Public Relations, Mordecai Lee. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, OK (2011), ISBN: 978-0-8061-4203-6. 437 - Barbara Miller:
Fundamentals of government information: Mining, finding, evaluating, and using government resources, Eric J. Forte, Cassandra J. Hartnett, Andrea L. Sevetson (Eds.). Neal-Schuman Publishers, New York (2011), ISBN: 978-1-55570-737-8. 437-438 - Beryl A. Radin:
Bureaucratic Ambition: Careers, Motives, and the Innovative Administrator, Manuel P. Teodoro. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltomire, MD (2011), ISBN: 978-1-4214-0245-1. 438-439 - Ryan Michael Shepard:
Countries at the Crossroads 2011: An Analysis of Democratic Governance, Christopher Walker, Vanessa Tucker (Eds.). Freedom House / Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, New York (2011), ISBN: 978-1442212619. 439-440
Volume 29, Number 4, October 2012
- Soon Ae Chun, Luis F. Luna-Reyes:
Social media in government. 441-445 - Dennis Linders:
From e-government to we-government: Defining a typology for citizen coproduction in the age of social media. 446-454 - Sounman Hong, Daniel Nadler:
Which candidates do the public discuss online in an election campaign?: The use of social media by 2012 presidential candidates and its impact on candidate salience. 455-461 - Kim Normann Andersen, Rony Medaglia, Helle Zinner Henriksen:
Social media in public health care: Impact domain propositions. 462-469 - Pawel Sobkowicz, Michael Kaschesky, Guillaume Bouchard:
Opinion mining in social media: Modeling, simulating, and forecasting political opinions in the web. 470-479 - Andrea L. Kavanaugh, Edward A. Fox, Steven D. Sheetz, Seungwon Yang, Lin Tzy Li, Donald J. Shoemaker, Apostol Natsev, Lexing Xie:
Social media use by government: From the routine to the critical. 480-491 - Gwanhoo Lee, Young Hoon Kwak:
An Open Government Maturity Model for social media-based public engagement. 492-503 - Sergio Picazo-Vela, Isis Gutiérrez-Martínez, Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes:
Understanding risks, benefits, and strategic alternatives of social media applications in the public sector. 504-511
- Antonio Cordella, Carla Marisa Bonina:
A public value perspective for ICT enabled public sector reforms: A theoretical reflection. 512-520 - Taewoo Nam:
Freedom of information legislation and its impact on press freedom: A cross-national study. 521-531 - Tony H. Grubesic:
The wireless abyss: Deconstructing the U.S. National Broadband Map. 532-542 - Annika Andersson, Åke Grönlund, Joachim Åström:
"You can't make this a science!" - Analyzing decision support systems in political contexts. 543-552 - Yu-Che Chen:
A comparative study of e-government XBRL implementations: The potential of improving information transparency and efficiency. 553-563 - Guangwei Hu, Jin Shi, Wenwen Pan, Jie Wang:
A hierarchical model of e-government service capability: An empirical analysis. 564-572 - Endrit Kromidha:
Strategic e-government development and the role of benchmarking. 573-581 - Norman E. Youngblood, Jo Mackiewicz:
A usability analysis of municipal government website home pages in Alabama. 582-588 - Rabia Karakaya Polat:
Digital exclusion in Turkey: A policy perspective. 589-596 - Marijana Petrovic, Natasa Bojkovic, Ivan Anic, Dalibor Petrovic:
Benchmarking the digital divide using a multi-level outranking framework: Evidence from EBRD countries of operation. 597-607
- Daniel Schuman, Emily Feltren:
"The State of Open Government": A Panel DiscussionDepository Library Council Meeting and Federal Depository Library Program Conference. Arlington, Virginia (October 19, 2011). 608-609 - Debbie L. Rabina:
Government and Information: The Law Relating to Access, Disclosure and Their Regulation, 4th edition, Patrick Birkinshaw, Mike Varney (Eds.). Bloomsbury Professional, West Sussex (2011), ISBN: 978-1-84766-708-3. 609-610 - Julia Proctor:
Policy Agendas Project. Administered by the University of Texas at Austin, College of Liberal Arts, Department of Government, 1 University Station A1800, Austin, TX 78712-0119. Retrieved February 15, 2012, from http: //www.policyagendas.org/. 610 - Rebecca G. Oxley:
Disability and the Internet: Confronting a Digital Divide, Paul T. Jaeger. Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc., Boulder, CO (2012), ISBN: 978-1-58826-828-0. 610-612 - Henry Owen III:
Privacy in America: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, William Aspray, Philip Doty (Eds.). Scarecrow Press, Lanham, MD (2011), ISBN: 978-0-8108-8110-5. 612-613
- Claudene Sproles:
Corrigendum to "Government is us 2.0, Cheryl Simrell King (Eds.), M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY, 2011, 241 pp. $89.95, ISBN: 978-0-7656-2501-4." [Government Information Quarterly 29 (2012) 309-310]. 614
- Christopher G. Reddick:
Government Information Quarterly 2011 Best Paper Award. 615-616
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