Search dgCommunities
 

Advanced Search


Featured Highlight

e-Development and the World Bank



Latest Content resources

 View more ››

G2C e-Government: Modernisation or Transformation?

Governments are investing heavily in e-government as a means of promoting 'the knowledge society'. A discourse of technology-enabled transformation is prevalent in Western culture, yet drawing upon the UK experience this article proposes that ambitions may exceed ability to deliver. We identify numerous barriers to transforming government through the web, such as problems with providing more than rudimentary functionality; requirements for identify verification which necessitate mixed-channel correspondence; challenges of assuring confidentiality; citizens' preference for engaging with human beings; and habitual behaviours which quite simply favour offline alternatives. We suggest that the UK government is raising expectations by moving beyond a modernisation agenda to a 'transformational government plan' before e-services have reached an adequate level of sophistication. We perceive a gap between vision and delivery and suggest that the immediate emphasis should shift to improving existing online services before embarking on transformational government.

View full text ››    Print     Email     Comment     Add content

Contributor: Eliachim Ishimwe
Published Date: March 17, 2008

Member Comments: (1)

Denise Senmartin ( Member ) email Full Name
FYI, to access the full version of this paper you have to pay as it is published in the IElectronic Government, an International Journal, Volume 4, Number 1, 27 January 2007 , pp. 68-75(8). It would be useful to include this information when you upload the resource. Thanks.
[March  27, 2008]
 
What is in this site? Member Services About this Community About dgCommunities User Help Contact Us