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ICEG 2006
Home >> ICEG >> ICEG 2006 >> 2-proceedings-iceg2006
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Proceedings of the
ICEG 2006: The International Conference on e-Government

CONTENTS

You can also download a copy of the Proceedings Abstract booklet here.

 

Paper Title

Author(s)

Proceedings
Page

Preface

 

iv

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

 

vi

Biographies of contributing authors

 

viii

Meta-Government: The Present and the Future of Administration’s Modernisation

Leo Anthopoulos and Anastassios Manos
University of Thessaloniki, Greece

1-7

The M-GOV Approach to e-Government Solutions

Ljupco Antovski and Marjan Gusev
University Ss. Cyril and Methodius, Skopje, Macedonia

8-16

Parliamentary Web Presence: A Comparative Review

Lasse Berntzen1, Mike Healy2, Panos Hahamis2, Debra Dunville3, José Esteves4
1Vestfold University College, Tønsberg, Norway
2University of Westminster, London UK
3House of Commons, Parliament of Canada, Ottawa, Canada
4Instituto de Empresa Business School, Serrano, Madrid, Spain

17-25

The Weaknesses in Managing Public-Private Partnerships: The Italian Experience of e-Procurement in Public Health Care Sector

Francesco Bof1 and Pietro Previtali2
1SDA Bocconi School of Management, Milan, Italy
2Business Research Department, University of Pavia, Italy

26-33

China and e-Government

Neal Coates and Maria Rojas
Abilene Christian University, Abilene, Texas, USA

34-41

Quality Model for Digital e-Government Services

Flavio Corradini, Francesco De Angelis, Alberto Polzonetti and Barbara Re
University of Camerino, Italy

42-51

Revenue On-Line Service (ROS), Ireland’s e-Government Success Story

Sean Cosgrove and Conor Hegarty
Revenue Commissioners, Trident House, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland

52-62

Measuring the Benefits of e-Government for the Case of Plan Approval Procedures

Christine Daun, Thomas Matheis and Peter Loos
Institute for Informations Systems, Saarbruecken, Germany

63-72

Applicability of Autonomic Computing to e-Government Problems

Shauneen Furlong
Territorial Communication, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

73-78

Factors Affecting the Success and Failure of Government ICT Projects in Developing Countries

David Gichoya, Mark Hepworth and Ray Dawson
Loughborough University, UK

79-90

A Semantic Web Application for Matching a Citizen’s Profile to Entitled Public Services

Sotirios Goudos, Vassilios Peristeras and Konstantinos Tarabanis
Center for Research and Technology Hellas, Thessaloniki, Greece

90-98

Framework for Gradual Implementation of Information Centered e-Governance in Developing Nations

Yonas Hagos
Overtone Software Inc, MD, USA

99-105

e-Government Project Management – A Cross-Border Oriented Experience Report

Bettina Hermes1, Christian Seel1, Michael Schmitt2 and Anne Rousseau2
1German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence Germany
2Centre de Recherche Public Henri Tudor, Luxemburg

106-114

The Service Oriented Architecture Approach in a Luxembourgish Public Agency

Patrik Hitzelberger and Fernand Feltz
Centre de Recherche Public, Belvaux, Luxembourg

115-120

The Role of Complexity in Preparing for Local Governments’ Decision-Making

Harri Jalonen
Tampere University of Technology, Turku University of Applied Sciences, Finland

121-130

e-Government Development in Hungary

Gabor Laszlo and Istvan Szuts
Budapest Tech Keleti Karoly Faculty of Economics, Hungary

131-141

An e-Communication System for Solving Citizens´ Problems Based on the Defined Life Situations, the Czech Republic

Martin Lukas, Mikulas Gangur and Miroslav Plevny
University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, Czech Republic

142-150

A Structurational Analysis of the Process of e-Government Implementation: A Case Study from Mozambique

Gertrudes Macueve
University of Oslo, Norway

151-161

Bureaucratic Effectiveness Through e-Government: Institutional or Technological Determinism? Theory and Cross-National Evidence

Rumel Mahmood
Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA

162-170

An Adaptive Aspect/Feature-Oriented Common Architecture for e-Government

Leandro Pupo Natale, Pollyana Notargiacomo Mustaro, Luciano Silva and Ismar Frango Silveira
IT/CS Department, Mackenzie Presbyterian University, Brazil

171-180

An Adequate Base for Theorizing e-Government Change in Africa: The Promise of Critical Realism and Complexity

Muranga Njihia
University of Warwick, Coventry, UK

181-189

e-Government by Doing – How e-Government Becomes a Driving Force for Improved Efficiency

Peter Salhofer, Barbara Meyer, Martin Hanak-Hammerl and David Ferbas
University of Applied Sciences, Graz , Austria

190-197

The Effects of IT Maturity on the Political and Administrative Chains of Governance

Bernt Krohn Solvang
Agder University College, School of Management, Grimstad, Norway

198-207

Mobile Government: Towards a Service Paradigm

Gang Song1 and Tony Cornford2
1Beijing Municipal Administration Commission, Xicheng District, Beijing China
2London School of Economics and Political Science, London UK

208-218

Assessing the e-Government Prospects in the Post-Transition Countries: e-Tax-Administration and the Taxpayers’ Response

Olga Soukhovtseva
Carleton University
, Canada

219-226

e-Government Challenges for Developing Nations: The Case of Education in Libya

Nassraddeen Amer Sweisi and Carl Adams
University of Portsmouth, UK

227-234

Identifying Common Workflow Patterns in Life-Events and Business Episodes

Ilias Trochidis, Efthimios Tambouris and Konstantinos Tarabanis
Center for Research and Technology. Thessaloniki, Greece

235-244

Interagency Collaboration Challenges in Emergency Response

Christine Williams, Janis Gogan, and Jane Fedorowicz
Bentley College, Waltham, MA, USA

245-253

Reflections on e-Voting in Ireland: Misunderstanding both Democracy and Technology?

Diana Wilson1, Paul Fyffe2, Mark Dunne3, Agnes Gogan1 and Dan Remenyi1
1Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
2One In Four Ireland
3Simply Mortgages, Ireland

254-264

Assessing the Impact of Information- and Communication Technologies (ICTs) on Governmental Power relationships: The State of Guanajato, Mexico

Philipp Zimmermann1and Philipp Mueller2
1Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, Switzerland
2EGAP – Tec de Monterrey, Mexico

265-274

 

 

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