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Information Polity, Volume 12
Volume 12, Numbers 1-2, 2007
- Editorial. 1-3
- Markus Kummer:
The debate on Internet governance: From Geneva to Tunis and beyond. 5-13 - Richard Collins:
Trilateralism, legitimacy and the Working Group on Internet Governance. 15-28 - David Souter:
Internet governance and development: Another digital divide? 29-38 - Houlin Zhao:
Internet governance: A personal perspective. 39-47 - David Satola:
Legal aspects of Internet governance reform. 49-62 - William H. Dutton, Malcolm Peltu:
The emerging Internet governance mosaic: connecting the pieces. 63-81 - Charles Kenny:
Internet governance on a dollar a day. 83-94 - Book Review: Internet Politics: States, Citizens, and New Communications Technologies, by Andrew Chadwick. 95-98
Volume 12, Number 3, 2007
- Editorial. 99-100
- Victor Bekkers:
Modernization, public innovation and information and communication technologies: The emperor's new clothes? 103-107 - Ott Pärna, Nick von Tunzelmann:
Innovation in the public sector: Key features influencing the development and implementation of technologically innovative public sector services in the UK, Denmark, Finland and Estonia. 109-125 - Angela Dovifat, Martin Brüggemeier, Klaus Lenk:
The "model of micropolitical arenas" - A framework to understand the innovation process of e-government-projects. 127-138 - Evelien Korteland, Victor Bekkers:
Diffusion of E-government innovations in the Dutch public sector: The case of digital community policing. 139-150 - Agneta Ranerup:
Electronic Government as a combination of human and technological agency: Testing the principle of symmetry. 153-167 - Rony Medaglia:
The challenged identity of a field: The state of the art of eParticipation research. 169-181 - Ben O'Loughlin:
Book Review: Change of State: Information, Policy, and Power, by Sandra Braman. 183-185 - Book Review: E-Government in Canada: Transformation for the Digital Age, by Jeffrey Roy. 187-191
Volume 12, Number 4, 2007
- John A. Taylor:
The value of retrospection, reflection and strong tools of analysis. 193 - Editorial: Twentieth Anniversary of the European Group of Public Administration's Permanent Study Group on ICTs in Public Administration. 197-199
- Ignace Snellen:
Is "Informatisation" after 20 years still a "corpus alienum" in Public Administration? 201-206 - Klaus Lenk:
Reconstructing Public Administration theory from below. 207-212 - John A. Taylor:
Rediscovering the Grand Narratives of the Information Polity: Reflections on the achievement and potential of the EGPA Study Group on ICT in Public Administration. 213-217 - Charles D. Raab:
The EGPA Study Group at 20: Reflections backwards, forwards, and sideways. 219-226 - Frank Bannister:
The perspective of Janus: Reflecting on EGPA past and future. 227-231 - Albert Jacob Meijer:
Why don't they listen to us? Reasserting the role of ICT in Public Administration. 233-242 - Miriam Lips:
Does public administration have artefacts? 243-252 - Fuat Alican:
Experts without expertise: E-society projects in developing countries - The case of Turkey. 255-263 - Rony Medaglia:
Measuring the diffusion of eParticipation: A survey on Italian local government. 265-280 - Book Review: Digital Era Governance: IT Corporations, The State and E-Government, by P. Dunleavy, H. Margetts, S. Bastow and J. Tinkler. 281-284
- Book Review: E-Government in Europe Re-booting the state, by Paul M. Nixon and Vassiliki N. Koutrakou. 285-287
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