Journal Article10.1016/J.GIQ.2004.10.001
E-government in China: Bringing economic development through administrative reform
TL;DR: This paper provides a number of illustrations of how Chinese e-government initiatives can be best understood as vehicles intended to support economic development through an increasingly transparent and decentralized administration while at the same time providing the central government the information and ability to efficiently monitor and potentially steer economic activity at a more abstract level.
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About: This article is published in Government Information Quarterly. The article was published on 01 Jan 2005. The article focuses on the topics: Central government & Government.
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Citations
The social credit system in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China
Dmitrii Vladimirovich Buyarov
- 01 Apr 2024
TL;DR: The social credit system in Xinjiang is a system of total control over the population based on the principles of total control, hybrid intelligence and social rating.
A path analytic model and measurement of the business value of e-government: An international perspective
TL;DR: The study strongly implies that firms in Dubai should use e- government as an information source to enhance their market intelligence and build revenues, and IT suppliers should emphasize e-government services that link firms to customers and collaborators, and facilitate access to key information resources.
E-government use and perceived government transparency and service capacity
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored whether the use of e-government improves citizens' perceptions of their local government and found that accessing information through government Web sites improves consumers' satisfaction with government transparency.
Strucluration Theory and Information Systems Adoption: A Case Study in the Contest of E-government
Guo Xunhua
TL;DR: This study applies Structuration Theory to e-government adoption, proposing a "structure-pattern" model to analyze IS adoption and application from an organizational perspective, validated through a case study in Beijing's Chaoyang District, improving traditional IT/IS research.
A hierarchical model of e-government service capability: An empirical analysis
TL;DR: A hierarchical model of e-Gov service capabilities is proposed and theoretical links are developed to explore the potential relationships among the effects caused by the processes involved in delivering e-gov services.
References
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Building the Virtual State: Information Technology and Institutional Change
Jane E. Fountain
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: Fountain this paper argues that the creation of a virtual state will not be easy, exposing much of the structural obsolescence of our current bureaucracy, and argues that if our government is to serve its central purpose -to work for its citizens and provide them with the opportunity to excel - it must embrace this change.
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Reinventing Local Governments and the E‐Government Initiative
TL;DR: Based on a content analysis of city web sites and a survey of web development officials, the authors shows that many cities are already moving toward this new paradigm, and they emphasize external collaboration and networking in the development process rather than technocracy.
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Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Authoritarian Rule (Acknowledgements)
Shanthi Kalathil,Taylor C. Boas +1 more
TL;DR: Through a country-by-country analysis, Kalathil and Boas shed light on practices formerly known only by anecdote, and their findings chip away at the apocryphal notion that going digital necessarily means going democratic.
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Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Authoritarian Rule (Chapter 1 The Conventional Wisdom: What Lies Beneath?)
Shanthi Kalathil,Taylor C. Boas +1 more
TL;DR: Kalathil and Boas shed light on practices formerly known only by anecdote, and their findings chip away at the apocryphal notion that going digital necessarily means going democratic.
233
The Internet and state control in authoritarian regimes: China, Cuba and the counterrevolution
Shanthi Kalathil,Taylor C. Boas +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors illustrate how two authoritarian regimes, China and Cuba, are maintainng control over the Internet's political impact through different combinations of reactive and proactive strategies, which can counter the challenge posed by Internet use and even utilize the Internet to extend its reach and authority.