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Digital Government 2008
- Hsinchun Chen, Lawrence Brandt, Valerie Gregg, Roland Traunmüller, Sharon S. Dawes, Eduard H. Hovy, Ann Macintosh, Catherine A. Larson:
Digital Government: E-Government Research, Case Studies, and Implementation. Integrated Series In Information Systems 17, Springer 2008, ISBN 978-0-387-71610-7 - Stephen Coleman:
Foundations of Digital Government. 3-19 - Hans Jochen Scholl:
Discipline or Interdisciplinary Study Domain? Challenges and Promises in Electronic Government Research. 21-41 - Eduard H. Hovy:
An Outline for the Foundations of Digital Government Research. 43-59 - Åke Grönlund:
Lost In Competition? The State of the Art in E-Government Research. 61-83 - Ann Macintosh:
E-Democracy and E-Participation Research in Europe. 85-102 - Sharon S. Dawes:
Introduction to Digital Government Research in Public Policy and Management. 103-125 - Priscilla M. Regan:
Privacy in an Electronic Government Context. 127-140 - Ann Becker:
Accessibility of Federal Electronic Government. 141-155 - Paul S. Herrnson, Richard G. Niemi, Michael J. Hanmer, Benjamin B. Bederson, Frederick G. Conrad, Michael W. Traugott:
The Current State of Electronic Voting in the United States. 157-180 - Angus Whyte:
E-Enabling the Mobile Legislator. 181-199 - Lawrence Brandt, Valerie Gregg:
History of Digital Government Research in the United States. 203-218 - Eduard H. Hovy:
Data and Knowledge Integration for e-Government. 219-231 - Tom M. van Engers, Alexander Boer, Joost Breuker, André Valente, Radboud Winkels:
Ontologies in the Legal Domain. 233-261 - Siddharth Kaza, Hsinchun Chen:
Public Safety Information Sharing: An Ontological Perspective. 263-282 - Maurício O. Tsugawa, Andréa M. Matsunaga, José A. B. Fortes:
Collaborative Cyberinfrastructure for Transnational Digital Government. 283-305 - Nabil R. Adam, Vandana P. Janeja, Aabhas V. Paliwal, Vijay Atluri, Soon Ae Chun, Jim Cooper, John Paczkowski, Christof Bornhövd, Joachim Schaper:
Semantics-Based Threat Structure Mining for Homeland Security. 307-329 - Fabio Fioravanti, Enrico Nardelli:
Identity Management for e-Government Services. 331-352 - Peggy Agouris, Arie Croitoru, Anthony Stefanidis:
Feature Integration for Geospatial Information: A Review and Outlook. 353-376 - Ganapati P. Patil, Raj Acharya, Amy Glasmeier, Wayne Myers, Shashi Phoha, Stephen L. Rathbun:
Geoinformatics of Hotspot Detection and Prioritization for Digital Governance. 377-394 - Sven Fuhrmann, Alan M. MacEachren, Guoray Cai:
Geoinformation Technologies to Support Collaborative Emergency Management. 395-420 - Theresa A. Pardo, J. Ramón Gil-García, G. Brian Burke:
Sustainable Cross-Boundary Information Sharing. 421-438 - Alan Borning, Paul Waddell, Ruth Förster:
Urbansim: Using Simulation to Inform Public Deliberation and Decision-Making. 439-464 - Helene Gieber, Christine Leitner, Gerti Orthofer, Roland Traunmüller:
Taking Best Practice Forward. 467-486 - Ann Macintosh, Nick Adams, Angus Whyte, Jim Johnston:
Epetitioning in the Scottish Parliament. 487-501 - Alan F. Karr:
Citizen Access to Government Statistical Information. 503-529 - Daniel Zeng, Hsinchun Chen, Ping Yan:
Infectious Disease Informatics and Syndromic Surveillance. 531-559 - Mathew Weaver, Lois M. L. Delcambre, Marianne Lykke Nielsen, Susan Price, David Maier, Timothy Tolle:
Supporting Domain-Specific Digital Libraries in Government: Two Case Studies. 561-583 - Fang-Ming Hsu, Paul Jen-Hwa Hu, Hsinchun Chen:
Business-Technology Alignments in e-Government: A Large-Scale Taiwan Government Electronic Record Management Systems Study. 585-613 - Chunxiao Xing, Ji-Jiang Yang, Wei He, Yong Zhang, Chen Chen:
Research and Development of Key Technologies for e-Government: Case Studies in China. 615-645 - Rowena Cullen:
New Zealand's 2006 Census Online: A Case Study. 647-670 - Bienvenido Vélez-Rivera, Manuel Rodríguez-Martínez, Walter Díaz, Mario Núñez-Molina, Pedro I. Rivera-Vega:
Multidisciplinary e-Government Research and Education as a Catalyst for Effective Information Technology Transfer. 671-695 - Pengzhu Zhang, Xiaoning Mao, Xieping Tang, Daniel Zeng:
A Hybrid e-Government Model: Case Studies in Shanghai. 697-718
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