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Government Information Quarterly, Volume 36
Volume 36, Number 1, January 2019
- Frank Bannister, Marijn Janssen:
The art of scholarly reviewing: Principles and practices. 1-4
- Daniel Jung:
"Assessing citizen adoption of e-government initiatives in Gambia: A validation of the technology acceptance model in information systems success". A critical article review, with questions to its publishers. 5-7 - Tomasz Janowski, Marijn Janssen:
Editors' note on the refutation of "Assessing citizen adoption of e-Government initiatives in Gambia: A validation of the technology acceptance model in information systems success". 9-10
- Hendrik Scholta, Willem Mertens, Marek Kowalkiewicz, Jörg Becker:
From one-stop shop to no-stop shop: An e-government stage model. 11-26 - Haiko Van Der Voort, A. J. Klievink, Michela Arnaboldi, Albert Jacob Meijer:
Rationality and politics of algorithms. Will the promise of big data survive the dynamics of public decision making? 27-38 - Ricardo Santa, Jason B. MacDonald, Mario Ferrer:
The role of trust in e-Government effectiveness, operational effectiveness and user satisfaction: Lessons from Saudi Arabia in e-G2B. 39-50 - Mehmet Akif Demircioglu, Chung-An Chen:
Public employees' use of social media: Its impact on need satisfaction and intrinsic work motivation. 51-60 - Nicholas Faulkner, Bradley Jorgensen, Georgina Koufariotis:
Can behavioural interventions increase citizens' use of e-government? Evidence from a quasi-experimental trial. 61-68 - Jae Bok Lee, Gregory A. Porumbescu:
Engendering inclusive e-government use through citizen IT training programs. 69-76 - Diego Corrales-Garay, Marta Ortiz-de-Urbina-Criado, Eva-María Mora-Valentín:
Knowledge areas, themes and future research on open data: A co-word analysis. 77-87 - Keegan McBride, Gerli Aavik, Maarja Toots, Tarmo Kalvet, Robert Krimmer:
How does open government data driven co-creation occur? Six factors and a 'perfect storm'; insights from Chicago's food inspection forecasting model. 88-97 - Josefin Lassinantti, Anna Ståhlbröst, Mari Runardotter:
Relevant social groups for open data use and engagement. 98-111 - Iryna Susha, Åke Grönlund, Rob Van Tulder:
Data driven social partnerships: Exploring an emergent trend in search of research challenges and questions. 112-128 - Martin Lnenicka, Jitka Komarkova:
Big and open linked data analytics ecosystem: Theoretical background and essential elements. 129-144 - Sounman Hong, Jungmin Ryu:
Crowdfunding public projects: Collaborative governance for achieving citizen co-funding of public goods. 145-153 - Juan C. Garrido-Rodríguez, Antonio M. López Hernández, José Luis Zafra-Gómez:
The impact of explanatory factors on a bidimensional model of transparency in Spanish local government. 154-165
Volume 36, Number 2, April 2019
- Jean Damascène Mazimpaka, Annika Andersson:
The public value of E-Government - A literature review. 167-178 - Leonardo Madariaga, Miguel Nussbaum, Faustino Marañón, Cristóbal Alarcón, María Alicia Naranjo:
User experience of government documents: A framework for informing design decisions. 179-195 - Marwan Elnaghi, Sarmad Alshawi, Muhammad Mustafa Kamal, Vishanth Weerakkody, Zahir Irani:
Exploring the role of a government authority in managing transformation in service re-engineering - Experiences from Dubai police. 196-207 - Seulki Lee-Geiller, Taejun (David) Lee:
Using government websites to enhance democratic E-governance: A conceptual model for evaluation. 208-225 - Taejun (David) Lee, Hyojung Park, Junesoo Lee:
Collaborative accountability for sustainable public health: A Korean perspective on the effective use of ICT-based health risk communication. 226-236 - Muhammad Shakaib Akram, Aneela Malik, Mahmud Akhter Shareef, Muhammad Awais Shakir Goraya:
Exploring the interrelationships between technological predictors and behavioral mediators in online tax filing: The moderating role of perceived risk. 237-251 - Duncan R. Shaw, Kamal Achuthan, Ashutosh Sharma, Andrew Grainger:
Resilience orchestration and resilience facilitation: How government can orchestrate the whole UK ports market with limited resources - the case of UK ports resilience. 252-263 - Donghee Shin:
A living lab as socio-technical ecosystem: Evaluating the Korean living lab of internet of things. 264-275 - Michael Robinson, Kevin I. Jones, Helge Janicke, Leandros A. Maglaras:
Developing cyber peacekeeping: Observation, monitoring and reporting. 276-293 - Hwansoo Lee, Siew Fan Wong, Jungjoo Oh, Younghoon Chang:
Information privacy concerns and demographic characteristics: Data from a Korean media panel survey. 294-303
- Atreyi Kankanhalli, Yannis Charalabidis, Sehl Mellouli:
IoT and AI for Smart Government: A Research Agenda. 304-309 - Ramzi El-Haddadeh, Vishanth Weerakkody, Mohamad Osmani, Dhaval Thakker, Kawaljeet Kaur Kapoor:
Examining citizens' perceived value of internet of things technologies in facilitating public sector services engagement. 310-320 - Tian Tang, Alfred Tat-Kei Ho:
A path-dependence perspective on the adoption of Internet of Things: Evidence from early adopters of smart and connected sensors in the United States. 321-332 - Bernd W. Wirtz, Jan C. Weyerer, Franziska T. Schichtel:
An integrative public IoT framework for smart government. 333-345 - Akemi Takeoka Chatfield, Christopher G. Reddick:
A framework for Internet of Things-enabled smart government: A case of IoT cybersecurity policies and use cases in U.S. federal government. 346-357 - Aggeliki Androutsopoulou, Nikos I. Karacapilidis, Euripidis N. Loukis, Yannis Charalabidis:
Transforming the communication between citizens and government through AI-guided chatbots. 358-367 - Tara Qian Sun, Rony Medaglia:
Mapping the challenges of Artificial Intelligence in the public sector: Evidence from public healthcare. 368-383
Volume 36, Number 3, July 2019
- N. Bindu, C. Prem Sankar, K. Satheesh Kumar:
From conventional governance to e-democracy: Tracing the evolution of e-governance research trends using network analysis tools. 385-399 - Gonçalo Paiva Dias:
Fifteen years of e-government research in Ibero-America: A bibliometric analysis. 400-411 - Andreiwid Sheffer Corrêa, Raul Mendes de Souza, Flávio Soares Corrêa da Silva:
Towards an automated method to assess data portals in the deep web. 412-426 - Ida Lindgren, Christian Østergaard Madsen, Sara Hofmann, Ulf Melin:
Close encounters of the digital kind: A research agenda for the digitalization of public services. 427-436 - Sandip Mukhopadhyay, Harry Bouwman, Mahadeo Prasad Jaiswal:
An open platform centric approach for scalable government service delivery to the poor: The Aadhaar case. 437-448 - Yu-Che Chen, Lung-Teng Hu, Kuan-Chiu Tseng, Wen-Jong Juang, Chih-Kai Chang:
Cross-boundary e-government systems: Determinants of performance. 449-459 - Britt Christensen:
Cyber state capacity: A model of authoritarian durability, ICTs, and emerging media. 460-468 - Patrícia Silva, António F. Tavares, Tiago Silva, Mariana Lameiras:
The good, the bad and the ugly: Three faces of social media usage by local governments. 469-479 - Enrique Bonsón, David Perea, Michaela Bednárová:
Twitter as a tool for citizen engagement: An empirical study of the Andalusian municipalities. 480-489 - Menno D. T. de Jong, Sharon Neulen, Sikke R. Jansma:
Citizens' intentions to participate in governmental co-creation initiatives: Comparing three co-creation configurations. 490-500 - Sara Harrison, Peter A. Johnson:
Challenges in the adoption of crisis crowdsourcing and social media in Canadian emergency management. 501-509 - Ahmad Jamal, Hatice Kizgin, Nripendra P. Rana, Michel Laroche, Yogesh K. Dwivedi:
Impact of acculturation, online participation and involvement on voting intentions. 510-519 - Luis Terán, José Mancera:
Dynamic profiles using sentiment analysis and twitter data for voting advice applications. 520-535 - Mijail Naranjo-Zolotov, Tiago Oliveira, Sven Casteleyn, Zahir Irani:
Continuous usage of e-participation: The role of the sense of virtual community. 536-545 - Maarja Toots:
Why E-participation systems fail: The case of Estonia's Osale.ee. 546-559 - Olfa Belkahla Driss, Sehl Mellouli, Zeineb Trabelsi:
From citizens to government policy-makers: Social media data analysis. 560-570 - Sabine Brunswicker, Laia Pujol Priego, Esteve Almirall:
Transparency in policy making: A complexity view. 571-591 - Gianluca Misuraca, Giulio Pasi:
Landscaping digital social innovation in the EU: Structuring the evidence and nurturing the science and policy debate towards a renewed agenda for social change. 592-600 - Hans Jochen Scholl, Manuel Pedro Rodríguez Bolívar:
Regulation as both enabler of technology use and global competitive tool: The Gibraltar case. 601-613 - Andrés Pavón Mediano, Diego Carrasco:
Ideology beyond partisanship: The behavior of judges on freedom of information cases in Chile. 614-623
Volume 36, Number 4, October 2019
- Weslei Gomes de Sousa, Elis Regina Pereira de Melo, Paulo Henrique de Souza Bermejo, Rafael Araújo Sousa Farias, Adalmir Oliveira Gomes:
How and where is artificial intelligence in the public sector going? A literature review and research agenda. - Manoj A. Thomas, Joseph Cipolla, Bob Lambert, Lemuria D. Carter:
Data management maturity assessment of public sector agencies. - Loni Hagen, Thomas E. Keller, Xiaoyi Yerden, Luis Felipe Luna-Reyes:
Open data visualizations and analytics as tools for policy-making. - Ines Mergel, Noella Edelmann, Nathalie Haug:
Defining digital transformation: Results from expert interviews. - Simon Vydra, Bram Klievink:
Techno-optimism and policy-pessimism in the public sector big data debate. - Ines Mergel:
Digital service teams in government. - J. Ramón Gil-García, Ahmet Guler, Theresa A. Pardo, G. Brian Burke:
Characterizing the importance of clarity of roles and responsibilities in government inter-organizational collaboration and information sharing initiatives. - Bo Fan, Ruoxuan Liu, Kun Huang, Yuxuan Zhu:
Embeddedness in cross-agency collaboration and emergency management capability: Evidence from Shanghai's urban contingency plans. - Maria Gintova:
Understanding government social media users: an analysis of interactions on Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada Twitter and Facebook. - Zhenya Tang, Leida Chen, Zhongyun Zhou, Merrill Warkentin, Mark Lee Gillenson:
The effects of social media use on control of corruption and moderating role of cultural tightness-looseness. - Naseer Abbas Khan, Ali Nawaz Khan:
What followers are saying about transformational leaders fostering employee innovation via organisational learning, knowledge sharing and social media use in public organisations? - Ali Pirannejad, Marijn Janssen, Jafar Rezaei:
Towards a balanced E-Participation Index: Integrating government and society perspectives. - Jia Lu, Li Qi, Xin Yu:
Political trust in the internet context: A comparative study in 36 countries. - Jasmin Riedl:
Uncovering legislative pace in Germany: A methodical and computational application to answer temporal questions of law-making.
- Panos Panagiotopoulos, Bram Klievink, Antonio Cordella:
Public value creation in digital government. - Sara Hofmann, Øystein Sæbø, Alessio Maria Braccini, Stefano Za:
The public sector's roles in the sharing economy and the implications for public values. - Agneta Ranerup, Helle Zinner Henriksen:
Value positions viewed through the lens of automated decision-making: The case of social services. - Oliver Neumann, Christian Matt, Benedikt Hitz-Gamper, Lisa Schmidthuber, Matthias Stürmer:
Joining forces for public value creation? Exploring collaborative innovation in smart city initiatives. - Antonio Cordella, Andrea Paletti:
Government as a platform, orchestration, and public value creation: The Italian case. - Yikai Liang, Guijie Qi, Xin Zhang, Gang Li:
The effects of e-Government cloud assimilation on public value creation: An empirical study of China. - Jingrui Ju, Luning Liu, Yuqiang Feng:
Public and private value in citizen participation in E-governance: Evidence from a government-sponsored green commuting platform.
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