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Measuring E-government Efficiency [electronic resource] : The Opinions of Public Administrators and Other Stakeholders / edited by Manuel Pedro Rodr�iguez-Bol�ivar.

Contributor(s): Rodr�iguez-Bol�ivar, Manuel Pedro [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Public Administration and Information Technology: 5Publisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XV, 285 p. 37 illus., 8 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781461499824.Subject(s): Management | Industrial management | Political science | Public administration | Economics | Public Administration | Innovation/Technology Management | Political ScienceAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 351 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
1. Introduction -- 2. Rethinking E-government Evaluation -- 3. Data Openness Evaluation: How open is your public Government data? -- 4. Measuring Usability to Improve the Efficiency of Electronic Signature-based E-Government Solutions -- 5. State-of-the-art review: Measuring efficiency and impact -- 6. Generic Mechanisms reflecting Technology Adoption Decisions: Lessons from the UK e-Voting Pilot Schemes -- 7. Measuring E-Government Efficiency from the Perspective of Implementers: The Case of E-Budgeting in Mexico -- 8. Public manager' perceptions of Spanish e-government efficiency at the municipal level: A case study -- 9. E-government and social media: the challenges and risks of online activities by civil servants -- 10. Managing E-government development. Stakeholder views from providers and citizens -- 11. Manchester as a Digital Powerhouse: Governing the ICT-related Developments -- 12. Digital Divide and the Study of Electronic Government Demand. An Empirical Analysis of Spain -- 13. A Quantitative Study to Assess the Probable Success Factors Effective on Different Stakeholder Groups in Turkish e-Government Transformation -- 14. Perceptions about e-participation effectiveness. A multistakeholder perspective -- 15. Conclusion.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: E-government has the potential to improve public services, information transparency, and the engagement of civic participation of the public sector management. This book analyzes the achievement of expectations created by public managers, policy-makers, and stakeholders with regard to the implementation of e-government policies and applications. It also tries to determine whether e-government applications have been introduced as a fad or according to real demands from citizenry and if efforts within e-government have been effective. This book investigates how public managers and policy-makers imagine e-government policies and the impact of those policies on their management and decision-making process through the engagement of citizenry. It is also discusses whether e-government policies are merely procedural improvements that strictly introduce new ways of delivering public services or disclosing public sector information. The book's analysis of the overall expectations on e-government applications makes it of interest to scholars in public administration as well as to policy-makers and stakeholders.
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1. Introduction -- 2. Rethinking E-government Evaluation -- 3. Data Openness Evaluation: How open is your public Government data? -- 4. Measuring Usability to Improve the Efficiency of Electronic Signature-based E-Government Solutions -- 5. State-of-the-art review: Measuring efficiency and impact -- 6. Generic Mechanisms reflecting Technology Adoption Decisions: Lessons from the UK e-Voting Pilot Schemes -- 7. Measuring E-Government Efficiency from the Perspective of Implementers: The Case of E-Budgeting in Mexico -- 8. Public manager' perceptions of Spanish e-government efficiency at the municipal level: A case study -- 9. E-government and social media: the challenges and risks of online activities by civil servants -- 10. Managing E-government development. Stakeholder views from providers and citizens -- 11. Manchester as a Digital Powerhouse: Governing the ICT-related Developments -- 12. Digital Divide and the Study of Electronic Government Demand. An Empirical Analysis of Spain -- 13. A Quantitative Study to Assess the Probable Success Factors Effective on Different Stakeholder Groups in Turkish e-Government Transformation -- 14. Perceptions about e-participation effectiveness. A multistakeholder perspective -- 15. Conclusion.

E-government has the potential to improve public services, information transparency, and the engagement of civic participation of the public sector management. This book analyzes the achievement of expectations created by public managers, policy-makers, and stakeholders with regard to the implementation of e-government policies and applications. It also tries to determine whether e-government applications have been introduced as a fad or according to real demands from citizenry and if efforts within e-government have been effective. This book investigates how public managers and policy-makers imagine e-government policies and the impact of those policies on their management and decision-making process through the engagement of citizenry. It is also discusses whether e-government policies are merely procedural improvements that strictly introduce new ways of delivering public services or disclosing public sector information. The book's analysis of the overall expectations on e-government applications makes it of interest to scholars in public administration as well as to policy-makers and stakeholders.

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