Difference between revisions of "E-government"
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E-Government, digital government or online government is the used of information communication technologies (ICTs) as a platform for exchanging online information, providing services and transacting government business with citizens, businesses, NGOs and other government agencies. | E-Government, digital government or online government is the used of information communication technologies (ICTs) as a platform for exchanging online information, providing services and transacting government business with citizens, businesses, NGOs and other government agencies. | ||
− | + | WorldBank, from a relational point of views, defines E-Government as | |
− | + | :''to the use by government agencies of information technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government.'' <ref> WorldBank http://go.worldbank.org/M1JHE0Z280 </ref> | |
− | + | ==[[E-Government: From Technology-driven to Citizen-driven]]== | |
− | |||
− | + | The shift in e-Government policy from being technology-driven towards being citizen-driven takes place in a context of a shift to governance, that is, to including civil society, citizens, and the private sector in the networks of government as a credible way forward. An OECD handbook,’ Citizens as Partners, OECD Handbook on Information, Consultation and Public Participation in Policy-Making (2001) cultivates the need to see citizens as partners in policymaking. [http://www.e-consultation.org/guide/index.php/E-Government:_From_Technology-driven_to_Citizen-driven Click here for more information] | |
− | + | ==[[E-Government and the Missing Dimension of Citizen’s Participation]]== | |
+ | |||
+ | As the implementation of e-Government progressed the development of transactional government on-line was prioritised in the 1990’s. As research exposed the growing digital divide, belatedly questions of democracy entered the debate. Increasing access and tackling the digital divide (given the evidence that lack of access to technology in an e-government context could in fact de-democratise) became a growing concern. An associated democratic question, namely increasing the quality of access and increasing citizen’s participation, likewise found its way onto the e-agenda in the early 2000’s. [http://www.e-consultation.org/guide/index.php/E-Government_and_the_Missing_Dimension_of_Citizen%E2%80%99s_Participation Click here for more infomation] | ||
==Local E-Government== | ==Local E-Government== | ||
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*[[Local E-Government in Northern Ireland]] | *[[Local E-Government in Northern Ireland]] | ||
*[[Local E-Government in Republic of Ireland]] | *[[Local E-Government in Republic of Ireland]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | <references /> |
Latest revision as of 15:01, 12 May 2008
Contents
E-Government
E-Government, digital government or online government is the used of information communication technologies (ICTs) as a platform for exchanging online information, providing services and transacting government business with citizens, businesses, NGOs and other government agencies.
WorldBank, from a relational point of views, defines E-Government as
- to the use by government agencies of information technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government. [1]
E-Government: From Technology-driven to Citizen-driven
The shift in e-Government policy from being technology-driven towards being citizen-driven takes place in a context of a shift to governance, that is, to including civil society, citizens, and the private sector in the networks of government as a credible way forward. An OECD handbook,’ Citizens as Partners, OECD Handbook on Information, Consultation and Public Participation in Policy-Making (2001) cultivates the need to see citizens as partners in policymaking. Click here for more information
E-Government and the Missing Dimension of Citizen’s Participation
As the implementation of e-Government progressed the development of transactional government on-line was prioritised in the 1990’s. As research exposed the growing digital divide, belatedly questions of democracy entered the debate. Increasing access and tackling the digital divide (given the evidence that lack of access to technology in an e-government context could in fact de-democratise) became a growing concern. An associated democratic question, namely increasing the quality of access and increasing citizen’s participation, likewise found its way onto the e-agenda in the early 2000’s. Click here for more infomation
Local E-Government
References
- ↑ WorldBank http://go.worldbank.org/M1JHE0Z280