Read more
Informationen zum Autor Peter Hernon is a professor at Simmons College, Graduate School of Library and Information Science. He is the coeditor of Library & Information Science Research and founding editor of Government Information Quarterly . Rowena Cullen is an Associate Professor in the School of Information Management at Victoria University of Wellington, where she teaches in the Master of Information Management and Master of Library and Information Studies programs. She is on the editorial boards of the Journal of E-Government , Health Information and Libraries Journal , Journal of Academic Librarianship , Performance Measurement and Metrics , Education for Information , and LibRes . Harold C. Relyea is a specialist in American National Government with the Congressional Research Service (CRS) of the Library of Congress. Klappentext E-government is a product of the Internet age, and Comparative Perspectives on E-Government identifies the various facets of e-government, comparing developments among five countries (Australia, UK, Canada, New Zealand, and the US). E-government is a more complex, rich phenomena than previously recognized. Zusammenfassung E-government is a product of the Internet age! and Comparative Perspectives on E-Government identifies the various facets of e-government! comparing developments among five countries (Australia! UK! Canada! New Zealand! and the US). E-government is a more complex! rich phenomena than previously recognized. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part 1 List of Figures and Tables Part 2 Preface Part 3 Part I: Introduction Chapter 4 1. E-government: Transforming Government Part 5 Part II: Individual Countries Chapter 6 2. E-government in the United States Chapter 7 3. E-government in the United Kingdom Chapter 8 4. E-government in Canada Chapter 9 5. E-government in Australia Chapter 10 6. E-government in New Zealand Part 11 Part III: Foundational Issues Chapter 12 7. Trust in Government Chapter 13 8. Access and Security Chapter 14 9. Trends and Challenges in Archiving E-government Records Part 15 Part IV: Audience Issues Chapter 16 10. Citizens' Response to E-government Chapter 17 11. More Citizen Perspectives on E-government Part 18 Part V: Results and Evaluation Chapter 19 12. Government Portals Chapter 20 13. Performance Metrics-Not the Only Way to Frame Evaluation Results Part 21 Part VI: Consequences Chapter 22 14. E-government and the Digital Divide Chapter 23 15. Broadband Internet Access and the Digital Divide in the United States Part 24 Part VII: Conclusion and Improvements in E-government Chapter 25 16. The Internet, the Government, and E-governance Chapter 26 17. Advancing E-government Part 27 Bibliography Part 28 Index Part 29 About the Editors and Contributors ...