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ICEG 2005
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Proceedings of

The International Conference on e-Government
held at the Lord Elgin Hotel, Ottawa, Canada
27-28 October 2005

The proceedings of the above conference are now available to purchase in BOOK format only:

UK AND EUROPE: Cost, including post and packing is Ł50.00
REST OF THE WORLD: Cost, including post and packing is Ł55.00


The Contents of the Proceedings are shown below.

If you would like to download and read the Abstracts of the papers presented at the Conference, please click here.

T
o order the Proceedings, please click here. 

 

Paper

Author(s)

Page

Preface

 

iv

Biographies of Conference Chairs, Programme Chair, Keynote Speaker and Mini-track Chairs

 

vi

Biographies of contributing Authors

 

viii

EGOVSAT: Toward a Robust Measure of e-Government Service Satisfaction in Transportation

Tarun Abhichandani, Thomas A. Horan and Raghuvira Rayalu
Claremont Graduate University
, USA

1

Public Deliberation on the Internet: The Case of Mexico and the Reform of the Federal Telecommunications Law

Manuel Alamilla and Carla Marisa Bonina
Centre for Research and Economic Teaching – CIDE, México City, Mexico

13

Holistic Process Redesign: A Prerequisite to Efficient e-Government

John Alexander
HISL Limited

25

A Framework for Valuing the Economic Profitability of e-Government

Michael Amberg, Rostislav Ivanov Markov and Shota Okujava
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Technology, Germany

31

Structurational Analysis of e-Government (a Case From Andhra Pradesh in India)

Rangamani Basettihalli1, Jane E Fountain1, Pan Shan Ling2, Hee-Woong, Kim2, Raman KS2 and Kankanhalli, Atreyi2
1
Harvard University, USA,2 National University of Singapore,
Singapore

43

E-Government And Territorial Management: A Case Of GIS Exploitation in Milan

Luca Buccoliero and Marta Marsilio
Bocconi University, Milan, Italy

57

Learning Experiences – Open Source

Jonathan Calof and John C. Nash
School of Management, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1N 9B5 Canada

69

e-Government Skills and Organizational Culture as a Key to e-Government Success

Eugenio Capra, Chiara Francalanci, and Clementina Marinoni Fondazione Politecnico di Milano, Italy

77

e-Governance for environmental planning perspectives of open content systems

A. Celino and G. Concilio
Department of Architecture and Town Planning, Polytechnic of Bari, Italy

89

A Conceptual Model for Semantically-based E-Government Portals

Alessio Gugliotta1 ,Liliana Cabral2, John Domingue2 and Vito Roberto11
University of Udine,
Italy2 The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK

101

A Practical Approach for Jump-Starting E-Governance in Technologically Disadvantaged Developing Nations

Yonas Hagos
Overtone Software Inc., MD, USA

113

Safety Net? Trust and e-Government

Panos Hahamis, Mike Healy and Jennifer Iles
Westminster Business School, University of Westminster, UK

119

E-Government in Sarawak, Malaysia: A Case Study of the Introduction of e-Government in a Developing Country

Teo Tien Hiong1 and Justo A. Diaz2
1
CEO, Sarawak Information Systems Group,2 Swinburne University of Technology (Sarawak Campus)

131

The Adoption of E-Government Strategies in Tanzania: Determining the Extent of Services and Targeted User Groups

Janet Kaaya
Department of Information Studies, University of California-Los Angeles, USA

141

Rule Based Flexible e-Government Applications

Aqueo Kamada and Manuel Mendes
Unicamp, Cidade Universitária, Campinas, Brazil

153

Open source for governments: Are the governments ready for transparency and interoperability?

Gabor Laszlo
Budapest Tech, Information Society Research and Education Group ,BudapestHungary

163

The Design of Authorisation Systems for Complex Computing Applications

Jim Longstaff, Mike Lockyer, Tony Howitt, Ian Elcoate and Paul Massey
University of Teesside, Middlesbrough, UK

175

E-Government Implementation in Mozambique: Contributing for Country’s Development by Controlling the Public Expenditures

Gertrudes Macueve
Institutt for Informatikk, University of Oslo, Norway

185

Design and Development of E-Government Portals: Trends, Best Practices, and Challenges

Bharat Maheshwari1, Sameer Verma2, and Vinod Kumar1
1Sprott School of Business, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, 2
PSTG Consulting, Toronto, Canada

195

Research policy challenges for e-Government: an international overview

Jeremy Millard
Danish Technological Institute, Aarhus, Denmark

207

Participative Democracy And E-Government: A Strategic Management Model For Local Government.

Francesc Miralles
UPF, Dept. of Technology, Barcelona, Spain

221

Citizen’s Deliberation on the Internet: A French Case Study

Laurence Monnoyer-Smith
University of Technology of Compičgne, Guillaumat, France

233

The Locking Affecting Advances in E-Government: The Necessary Transformations of Project Management

Laëtitia Morin
Ecole des MORIN Mines de Paris, France

241

Open ICT e-Government Architecture as an Interoperability Framework

Libor Neumann1 and Pavel Benda2
1
ANECT Vinohradská Praha, Czech Republic, 2ASD software s.r.o, Žerotínova Šumperk, Czech Republic

251

Distributed Authentication and ization in  e-Government

Libor Neumann1 and Pavel Sekanina2
1
ANECT a.s
., Vinohradská 112, 130 00 Praha, Czech Republic2ANECT a.s., Vídenská 125, 619 00 Brno, Czech Republic

265

How to Compare and Analyze Risks of Internet Voting Versus Other Modes of Voting

Saggi Nevo and Henry Kim
Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto, Canada.

275

Enabling Democracy? e-Government, Inclusion & Citizenship.

Paul G. Nixon and Rajash Rawal
The Hague University, The Netherlands

281

Grassroots Electronic Government: Recent Evolution and Current Status

Donald F. Norris
University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA

291

The Challenges of Implementing an On-line Concept for Citizen Engagement: An Assessment of a Failed e-Parliament Initiative

Norman J. O’Reilly1 and Shari Currie2
1
School of Business Management, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada,2Department of National Defence, Ottawa, ON, Canada

301

Enforcement of Security Policies for e-Government Services on Municipal and Cross-Border Level

Nikolaos Oikonomidis, Sergiu Tcaciuc and Christoph Ruland
University of Siegen, Institute for Data Communication Systems, Germany

311

Attitudes and Perceptions of Canadians towards E-Government

Ajax Persaud1 and Pankaj Sehgal2
1
University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,2Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

321

Repeated Use of E-Gov Websites: A Satisfaction and Confidentiality Perspective

H R Rao, S. Chai, T. C. Herath, and I. Park
School of Management, State University of New York USA

331

Managing Issues in the Network Age: Blogosphere, SlashDot Effects and Coping Strategies for Public Servants.

Elisabeth Richard
Public Works and Government Services, Quebec Canada

341

E-Commerce and Governments: Potential versus Reality

Bruce Rocheleau
Division of Public Administration, Northern Illinois University, USA

353

Using Open Source Software Development Models for e-Government Solutions

Peter Salhofer and Martin Pickl
University of Applied Sciences, Information Management, Graz, Austria

363

Government Engineering – Towards Administrational Excellence

Christian Seel, Oliver Thomas and Bettina Kaffai
Institute for Information Systems Germany

375

Whither Deliberation? Mass e-Mail Campaigns and U.S. Regulatory Rulemaking

Stuart W. Shulman
School of Information Sciences, University of Pittsburgh

385

e-Government in the Post-Transition Economy: Does it Impact the Efficiency and Effectiveness of the tax Administration?

Olga Soukhovtseva
Sprott School of Business, Carleton University, Canada

395

The e-governed State: Ensuring Accountability

Jaqueline Spence
Department of Information Studies, University of Wales, UK

405

e-Government Down Under: An exploratory study of Internet-facilitated relationships between governments and their citizens

Arthur Sweeney
Department of Marketing, Griffith University, Australia

415

Towards a Theoretical Framework of e-Government Adoption and Acceptance

Ryad Titah and Henri Barki
Implementation and Management. HEC Montréal, Canada

425

Verifying e-Government Market Segments

Tim Turner1, Andrea Schwager1 and Zixiu Guo21
Australian Defence Forces Academy, University of New South Wales, Australia2Faculty of Commerce and Economics, University of New South Wales, Australia

441

The State of Art of Brazilian E-Government: Practices and Challenges

Maria Vasconcellos, Marcelo Persegona, Maria Santos, Maria Rua, Isabel Alves, and Arthur Guimaraes
Sustainable Development Center, Federal University of Brasília, Brasil

453

Towards An Open Source Model for Democratic Politics

Christine Williams and Pierre Berthon
Bentley College, Waltham, Massachusetts, U.S.A

463

 

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