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Electronic Government, an International Journal, Volume 11
Volume 11, Numbers 1/2, 2014
- Sushil Kumar Singla, Himanshu Aggarwal:
Status of e-governance in the state of Punjab (India): an analytical study. 1-15 - Zhenglun Chen:
US e-government headings and their ideology. 16-38 - Christopher G. Reddick, Patricia A. Jaramillo:
New digital media use and preferences for government: a survey of Canadians. 39-58 - Hind Lamharhar, Adil Kabbaj, Dalila Chiadmi, Laila Benhlima:
An e-government knowledge model: 'e-customs' case study. 59-82 - Norshila Shaifuddin, Mohd Jasmi Md. Piah, Raja Noriza Raja Ariffin:
The needs and criteria of kiosks in supporting e-government. 83-100 - Abdoullah Fath-Allah, Laila Cheikhi, Rafa E. Al-Qutaish, Ali Idri:
E-government portals best practices: a comprehensive survey. 101-132
Volume 11, Number 3, 2015
- Madi Al-Sebie:
Technical challenges facing integration e-government systems: an empirical study. 133-153 - Assia Tebib, Mahmoud Boufaïda:
An architecture using formal interaction protocols for business process integration in e-government. 154-170 - Probir Kumar Banerjee, Louis C. K. Ma, Ronnie H. Shroff:
E-governance competence: a framework. 171-184 - Francesco Buccafurri, Lidia Fotia, Gianluca Lax:
A privacy-preserving e-participation framework allowing citizen opinion analysis. 185-206 - Anna Che Azmi, Nurul Fatma Aziz:
Trust, justice and the continued use of e-filing. 207-222
Volume 11, Number 4, 2015
- Emad Abu-Shanab, Shatha Haider:
Major factors influencing the adoption of m-government in Jordan. 223-240 - L. C. O. Klaus:
Military electronic governance as a proxy of Armed Forces' integrity: a model and an example. 241-257 - K. Harald Gjermundrød, Ioanna Dionysiou:
A conceptual framework for configurable privacy-awareness in a citizen-centric eGovernment. 258-282 - Bingjia Shao, Xin (Robert) Luo, Qinyu Liao:
Factors influencing e-tax filing adoption intention by business users in China. 283-305 - Tobias Kollmann, Ina Kayser, Christoph Stöckmann:
What matters most? Investigating the role of perceived risk and trust in the acceptance of social networks for political communication. 306-321
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