Site Navigation
Categories:
Politics and technology
Technology in society
Public administration
Radio-frequency identification

Summary Of: E-Government

e-Government may be applied by the... The most important anticipated benefits of e-government include more efficiency... While e-government is often thought of as... E-government is the use of information technology to provide citizen and organizations with more convenient access... E-government in the United States was especially driven by the 1998 Government Paperwork Elimination Act and... The development and implementation of e-government involves consideration of its effects on the organisation of the public sector... the implementation of e-government has effects on... there is a wish to mainstream e-government so that best use of technology is integrated into all public sector activity rather than... many administrations recognise the importance of linking e-government to wider public sector change programmes... the phrase e-government is itself not particularly useful in motivating a change programme... All these considerations suggest that e-government is entering a new phase and one in which the term... UN e-Government Readiness Knowledge Base... The Failure of E-Government in Developing Countries... e-government and the use of the Internet by parliaments and assemblies...

Encyclodia Page On: E-Government

These Are Links To Other Documents
electronic | government | transformational government | legislature | judiciary | administration | governance | Government-to-Customer | Government-to-Business | Government-to-Government | PDA | SMS | MMS | Bluetooth | CCTV | RFID | biometric | identity cards | smart cards | NFC | e-voting | online community | newsgroups | electronic mailing lists | online chat | instant messaging | m-government | GIS | GPS | disintermediation | United Kingdom | voter turnout | UK Electoral Commission | cultural diversity | Digital divide | GDP | corporate governance | Internet Service Providers | interoperability | e-GIF | semantic web | open source | programming languages | blogging | ICANN | IETF | W3C | transformational government | Web 2.0 | Digital Government Society of North America | E-democracy | Electronic voting | E-Authentication | E-participation | E-Government Unit | eRulemaking | E-procurement | Electronic services delivery | IDABC | Knowledge policy | Online consultation | Online deliberation | Open source governance | SEMIC.EU | Transformational Government | National Center for Digital Governance | Privacy | Identity document | 2007 | 2008 | 07-10 | 2002 | 02-05 | West, Darrell | The Brookings Institution | 2008 | 08-26 | 2008 | 09-16 | West, Darrell | The Brookings Institution | 2008 | 08-26 | 2008 | 09-16 | Wikibooks | Wikibooks | State Services Commission | UK | University of Salford | Open Directory Project | Categories | Politics and technology | Technology in society | Public administration | Radio-frequency identification |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "E-Government".