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Information Polity, Volume 15
Volume 15, Numbers 1-2, 2010
- Soon Ae Chun, Stuart W. Shulman, Rodrigo Sandoval, Eduard H. Hovy:
Government 2.0: Making connections between citizens, data and government. 1-9 - Scott P. Robertson, Ravi K. Vatrapu, Richard Medina:
Off the wall political discourse: Facebook use in the 2008 U.S. presidential election. 11-31 - Clemens Heidinger, Erik Buchmann, Klemens Böhm:
Impact assessment in public policy: Towards a Web 2.0 application. 33-50 - Nicolas Maisonneuve, Matthias Stevens, Bartek Ochab:
Participatory noise pollution monitoring using mobile phones. 51-71 - Cristiano Maciel, Licínio Roque, Ana Cristina Bicharra Garcia:
Interaction and communication resources in collaborative e-democratic environments: The democratic citizenship community. 73-88 - Soon Ae Chun, Janice Warner:
Finding information in an era of abundance: Towards a collaborative tagging environment in government. 89-103 - Adegboyega K. Ojo, Elsa Estevez, Tomasz Janowski:
Semantic interoperability architecture for Governance 2.0. 105-123 - Sunil Choenni, Jan van Dijk, Frans Leeuw:
Preserving privacy whilst integrating data: Applied to criminal justice. 125-138 - Georg Aichholzer, Stefan Strauß:
Electronic identity management in e-Government 2.0: Exploring a system innovation exemplified by Austria. 139-152 - Bram Klievink, Marijn Janssen:
Simulation gaming as a social development instrument: Dealing with complex problems. 153-165 - J. Ramón Gil-García:
Book Review: How Technology Can Make Government Better, Democracy Stronger, and Citizens More Powerful, by B.S. Noveck. 167-170 - Yiwei Gong:
Book Review: Handbook of Research on ICT-Enabled Transformational Government: A Global Perspective, Vishanth Weerakkody. 171-173
Volume 15, Number 3, 2010
- John A. Taylor:
Editorial: Information Polity: an international journal for the information age. 175-176 - Weibing Xiao:
The improved information environment as a key rationale for freedom of information reform in China. 177-187 - Fuat Alican:
Can information technology contribute to social peace? The case of southeastern Turkey. 189-198 - Mirko Vintar, Janja Nograsek:
How much can we trust different e-government surveys? The case of Slovenia. 199-213 - Rune Karlsen:
Does new media technology drive election campaign change? 215-225 - Mehmet Zahid Sobaci:
What the Turkish parliamentary web site offers to citizens in terms of e-participation: A content analysis. 227-241 - Book Review: The Cult of the Amateur: how today's internet is killing our culture, by Andrew Keen. 243-245
- Alistair S. Duff:
Book Review: Information Policies and Strategies, by Ian Cornelius. 247-248
Volume 15, Number 4, 2010
- John A. Taylor:
Editorial: Digital Visions and Digital Identity. 249-251 - Birgit Jæger, Karl Löfgren:
The history of the future: Changes in Danish e-government strategies 1994-2010. 253-269 - Miriam Lips:
Rethinking citizen - government relationships in the age of digital identity: Insights from research. 273-289 - Malcolm Crompton:
User-centric identity management: An oxymoron or the key to getting identity management right? 291-297 - Marie Shroff, Annabel Fordham:
"Do you know who I am?" Exploring identity and privacy. 299-307 - Simone van der Hof, Esther Keymolen:
Shaping minors with major shifts: Electronic child records in the Netherlands. 309-322 - Jason Whalley:
Book Review: Access Denied - The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering, Edited by Ronald Deibert. 323-326 - Alice Robbin:
Book Review: World Wide Research: Reshaping the Sciences and Humanities, by William H. Dutton and Paul W. Jeffreys, eds. 327-331
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