Paralleling the dynamic maturation of far-reaching distributed information and computing technologies
has been an accelerated demand by citizens for electronic access to government services. Conversely,
government administrators and officials have driven themselves to harness the cost, quality, and efficiency
benefits that electronic service delivery offers. Profoundly traversing all facets of compound
societies, electronic government implicates and impacts information science, political science, civic
relations, electronic justice, security and privacy ethics, government-to-government interactions, and
information policy.
During this period of time numerous researchers, academicians, and government officials have developed
a variety of techniques, methodologies, and measurement tools that have allowed them to develop,
deliver and at the same time evaluate the effectiveness of several areas of electronic government.
Details
- Publication Date
- Oct 31, 2013
- Language
- English
- Category
- Computers & Technology
- Copyright
- All Rights Reserved - Standard Copyright License
- Contributors
- By (author): Sarah Formagin
Specifications
- Format