default search action
Information Polity, Volume 28
Volume 28, Number 1, 2023
- Information Polity publishes more than strong empirical studies: It is a rich platform for learning and debate. 1-3
- Rehan Syed, Wasana Bandara, Rebekah Eden:
Public sector digital transformation barriers: A developing country experience. 5-27 - Marcus Heidlund, Katarina Lindblad-Gidlund:
The making of digitalization: Like nailing jelly to a wall. 29-42 - Ali Asker Guenduez, Tobias Mettler, Kuno Schedler:
The role of trust in the adoption of cooperative arrangement types in e-credentials markets. 43-59 - Fernando Escobar, Washington Henrique de Carvalho Almeida, João Varajão:
Digital transformation success in the public sector: A systematic literature review of cases, processes, and success factors. 61-81 - Hossein Masoudnia, Maryam Ghorbani, Daniel Stockemer:
The (indirect) effect of social media consumption on political distrust in Egypt. 83-95 - Natasja Van Buggenhout, Wendy Van den Broeck:
Media users' and professionals' responses to personal data receipts: A mixed methods study. 97-115 - Lin Zhu, Mehmet Akif Demircioglu:
National approaches for citizen data management in response to COVID-19: An overview and implications of contact tracing apps in 21 countries. 117-139 - Siva Mathiyazhagan, Karolina La Fors:
Children's right to participation in AI: Exploring transnational co-creative approaches to foster child-inclusive AI policy and practice. 141-153 - Seulki Lee-Geiller:
Developing Digital Governance: South Korea as a Global Digital Government Leader. 155-158
Volume 28, Number 2, 2023
- Two Editorials: An Editorial by the Editors-in-Chief and an Editorial by ChatGPT. 159-162
- Shirley Kempeneer, Johan Wolswinkel:
Rethinking Open Government Data for Citizen Participation. An Introduction to a Special Issue. 163-173 - Heather Broomfield:
Where is open data in the Open Data Directive? 175-188 - C. Johan Wolswinkel:
The Dutch Open Government Act: Bridging old and new open government? 189-197 - Tobias Mettler, Gianluca Miscione:
Is altruism dead? A critical case study on the paradigm shift in Open Government Data. 199-218 - Keegan McBride, Anastasija Nikiforova, Martin Lnenicka:
The role of open government data and co-creation in crisis management: Initial conceptual propositions from the COVID-19 pandemic. 219-238 - Alex Ingrams, Wesley Kaufmann, Daan Jacobs:
Citizen requests and the price of public information: An experimental test. 239-258 - Rajesh Dinesh Hanbal, Amit Prakash, Janaki Srinivasan:
Seeing data like a state: A case of Open Government Data in India's livelihoods program. 259-275 - Bjorn Kleizen, Wouter Van Dooren:
Is everything under control? An experimental study on how control over data influences trust in and support for major governmental data exchange projects. 277-299 - Gijs van Maanen:
What if? A short commentary on the philosophical bedrock of open government discourse. 301-305 - Keitha Booth:
The Power of Partnership in Open Government: Reconsidering Multistakeholder Governance Reform. 307-310 - Shirley Kempeneer:
Tkacz, Nathaniel (2022) Being with data: The dashboarding of everyday life, Polity Press. 311-314
Volume 28, Number 3, 2023
- Editorial issue 3 2023: The Value of Classic Works in our Field. 315-316
- Mille Edith Kjærsgaard Hansen, Jonathan Crusoe, Ulf Melin:
Exploration of metaphors as a way to understand socio-technical phenomena: An emergent framework. 317-340 - Cesar Renteria, Samanta Varela-Castro:
A landscape of participatory platform architectures: Ideas, decisions, and mapping. 341-358 - Sveinung Legard, Ian McShane, José Manuel Ruano:
What explains the degree of e-participation? A comparison of the adoption of digital participation platforms in Oslo, Melbourne and Madrid. 359-375 - Huaxiong Jiang:
A SWOT analysis of smart governance applications amid the COVID-19 pandemic. 377-393 - Roos Hofstra, Ank Michels, Albert Meijer:
Online democratic participation during COVID-19. 395-410 - Vasili Mankevich, Johan Magnusson, Fredrik Svahn:
The great wave: The increasing demand for digital competence within the public sector. 411-434 - Isabelle C. Fest:
Jérôme Duberry (2022) Artificial Intelligence and Democracy: Risks and Promises of AI-mediated citizen-government relations, Edward Elgar: Cheltenham. 435-438 - Md. Ashraful Islam, Md. Al-Fahad Bhuiyan:
Social media adoption in the public sector of Bangladesh: Progress and efficiency. 439-449
Volume 28, Number 4, 2023
- Editorial: Improving Diversity in our Journal. 451-452
- Rodrigo Firmino, Rafael Evangelista:
Pandemic techno-politics in the Global South. 453-467 - Bram Faber:
Informal experimentation, centralization, or distribution? Assessing technological, organizational and contextual factors for social media institutionalization processes in Dutch municipalities. 469-486 - Michelle Allgood, Ashlee Frandell:
U.S. state health agencies and organizational learning: An exploratory analysis of website accessibility during COVID-19. 487-501 - David Karlström, Gustav Lidén, Leif Sundberg:
Explaining variations in the implementation and use of e-petitions in local government. 503-521 - Marcus Heidlund, Leif Sundberg:
What is the value of digitalization? Strategic narratives in local government. 523-539 - Evrim Tan:
Designing an AI compatible open government data ecosystem for public governance. 541-557 - Pate Fussey, C. William R. Webster:
Policy Review: The Evolving Governance of Surveillance Cameras in the UK. 559-567
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.