DG.O 2009:
Puebla,
Mexico
Soon Ae Chun, Rodrigo Sandoval, Priscilla M. Regan (Eds.):
Proceedings of the 10th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research, Partnerships for Public Innovation, DG.O 2009, Puebla, Mexico, May 17-20, 2009.
ACM International Conference Proceeding Series 390 Digital Government Research Center 2009, ISBN 978-1-60558-535-2
- Beth Noveck:
WIKI government: a public sector innovation.
1
- Janice Nall:
CDC 2.0: using social media to improve public health.
2
- Andrés Hoffman, Rodolfo Torres, León David Pérez:
Electronic government experiences: the case of Mexican federal portals.
3-4
- Zeferino Torreblanca:
Sponsored lunch keynote address: The role of state governments in the promotion of digital agenda for Mexico.
5
- Scott P. Robertson, Ravi K. Vatrapu, Richard Medina:
The social life of social networks: Facebook linkage patterns in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.
6-15
- Thomas Skirbunt, Leilani Martinez, Darlene Meskell:
Government outreach to the U.S. Spanish-speaking community uses social media.
16-18
- Britt Blaser, David Weinberger, Joe Trippi:
Digital government through social networks: how citizens can aggregate their money and votes to define digital government.
19-24
- Cristiano Maciel, Licinio Roque, Ana Cristina Bicharra Garcia:
Democratic citizenship community: a social network to promote e-deliberative process.
25-34
- Peter Muhlberger, Jennifer Stromer-Galley:
Automated and hand-coded measurement of deliberative quality in online policy discussions.
35-41
- Michael Kaschesky, Reinhard Riedl:
Top-level decisions through public deliberation on the internet: evidence from the evolution of Java governance.
42-55
- Rajiv C. Shah, Jay P. Kesan:
Interoperability challenges for open standards: ODF and OOXML as examples.
56-62
- Adegboyega K. Ojo, Tomasz Janowski, Elsa Estevez:
Semantic interoperability architecture for electronic government.
63-72
- Bram Klievink, Marijn Janssen:
Improving integrated service delivery: a simulation game.
73-78
- Khaled Gaaloul, François Charoy, Andreas Schaad:
Modelling task delegation for human-centric eGovernment workflows.
79-87
- Kimberly Stoltzfus:
"Why can't we share?": applying a stakeholder model to investigate implementing inter-governmental networks.
88-95
- Nicolas Maisonneuve, Matthias Stevens, Maria E. Niessen, Peter Hanappe, Luc Steels:
Citizen noise pollution monitoring.
96-103
- Marije Teerling, Willem Pieterson:
Multi-channel marketing: an experiment on leading citizens to online public services.
104-112
- Teresa M. Harrison, James P. Zappen, David Watson:
Children's use of government information systems: design and usability.
113-122
- Luis F. Luna-Reyes, José Ramón Gil-García, Georgina Romero:
Modelo integral de evaluación del gobierno electrónico: un propuesta preliminar.
123-133
- María del Rocío Gómez Díaz, Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazan:
Gestión del conocimiento estrategia de vinculación en los centros comunitarios de aprendizaje.
134-142
- Enrique Gabriel Munive Aportela, Erika Yamel Munive Cortés:
Alfabetización tecnológica: el reto del gobierno electrónico en México.
143-152
- Terrence Maxwell, Sharon S. Dawes:
Public governance as a socio-technical system: from concept to application.
153-161
- Beat Estermann, Reinhard Riedl, Alessia C. Neuroni:
"Integrated" and "transcendent" e-government: keys for analyzing organizational structure and governance.
162-171
- Natalie Helbig, Jana Hrdinová, Donna S. Canestraro:
Enterprise IT governance at the state level: an emerging picture.
172-179
- Marianne Fraefel, Alessia C. Neuroni, Reinhard Riedl:
Reflecting the relevance of communication in e-government-projects: two case studies in the field of knowledge management in the Swiss public administration.
180-189
- Clemens Heidinger, Erik Buchmann, Klemens Böhm:
Towards collaborative web-based impact assessment.
190-198
- Janice Warner, Soon Ae Chun:
Semantic and pragmatic annotation for government information discovery, sharing and collaboration.
199-205
- Natalie Kopytko, Judith Bayard Cushing, Lee Zeman, Nik Stevenson-Molnar, Fred Martin, Edward S. Keeley:
Making ecology research results useful for resource management: a case study in visual analytics.
206-215
- Francisco J. Artigas, Soon Ae Chun, Yogi Sookhu:
Real-time ocean surge warning system, meadowlands district of New Jersey.
216-222
- Sunil Choenni, Jan van Dijk:
Towards privacy preserving data reconciliation for criminal justice chains.
223-229
- Georg Aichholzer, Stefan Strauß:
Understanding a complex innovation process: identity management in Austrian e-government.
230-239
- Norman K. Sondheimer, Ethan Katsh, Lori A. Clarke, Leon J. Osterweil, Daniel Rainey:
Dispute prevention and dispute resolution in networked health information technology.
240-243
- Nusa Erman:
Citation analysis for e-government research.
244-253
- Klaus Petrik:
Participation and e-democracy how to utilize web 2.0 for policy decision-making.
254-263
- Norton Trevisan Roman, Cristiano D. Ferreira, Luis A. A. Meira, Rodrigo Carvalho Rezende, Luciano A. Digiampietri, Jorge Jambeiro Filho:
Attribute-value specification in customs fraud detection: a human-aided approach.
264-271
- Yau-Tzu Ma, Andrea Crestan:
Taiwan's challenges for significant international tourism market growth.
272-276
- Nitesh Bharosa, JinKyu Lee, Marijn Janssen, H. Raghav Rao:
A case study of information flows in multi-agency emergency response exercises.
277-282
- Anton Joha, Marijn Janssen:
Comparing strategic intents for public-private partnerships, outsourcing and shared services.
283-292
- Jane Fedorowicz, Martin Dias, Steve Sawyer:
Design in digital government research.
293-301
- Ramezanali Azadehdel, Kourosh Dadashtabar, Ehsan Enami:
Design and architecture of a new crisis situation room (CSR).
302-308
- Michael Dale, Abram Stern, Mark Deckert, Warren Sack:
System demonstration: Metavid.org: a social website and open archive of congressional video.
309-310
- Sameer Ahuja, Manuel A. Pérez-Quiñones, Andrea L. Kavanaugh:
Local conversations 2.0.
311-312
- Gholam Ali Montazer, M. Hoseini Moghadam:
Toward a proper model for informational development in developing countries (the Iranian experience).
313-314
- Konrad Walser, Andreas Kühn, Reinhard Riedl:
Risk management in e-government from the perspective of IT governance.
315-316
- Daekeun You, Zhixin Shi, Venu Govindaraju, Alan Blatt:
Line removal and handwritten word recognition of police accident report forms.
317-318
- Fernando Ortiz-Rodríguez, Julian Chaparro Pelaez, Félix Jose Pascual:
Semantic model approach for eGovernment to improve sharing, retrieving and exchanging documentation across back-office.
319-320
- M. D. María Elena Carbajal Franco:
Esquemas de participación mixtos.
321-323
- Sergio R. Coria, Aurelia Gómez-Gómez, Juan C. Bustamante:
An information technology department in a disadvantaged municipality in Mexico: need and feasibility.
324-325
- Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán, Mario A. Gutiérrez-Alonso:
Virtual assistants for e-government: a preliminary study.
326-327
- Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazan, Sehl Mellouli, Faouzi Bouslama:
A new framework for analyzing political news.
328-329
- Cindy R. Pérez Díaz, René Méndez Aceves, Luis F. Luna-Reyes:
Portales de gobierno estatal en México: el caso del portal del gobierno del estado de Puebla.
330-331
- Susana B. Vidrio-Baron, Anthony M. Townsend, Mack C. Shelley:
Toward a proposed methodology to assess e-government websites usability in the context of cultural dimensions: (research in progress).
332-333
- Wenjuan Fan, Anhong Ling, Xiang Li, Gang Liu, Jian Zhan, Lian Li, Yongzhong Sha:
Interactive GIS-based interface for time-critical application.
334-335
- Jing Zhang, Luis F. Luna-Reyes, David F. Andersen, Andy Whitmore, Réjean Roy:
Exploring digital government initiatives to expand full information product pricing (FIPP) networks in NAFTA.
336-337
- José Ramón Gil-García, Luis F. Luna-Reyes, Sehl Mellouli, Celene Navarrete, Theresa A. Pardo, Jing Zhang:
Research group on digital government in North America: developing a comparative and transnational agenda.
338-339
- André Marcelo Panhan, Eder Ignatowicz, Leonardo S. Mendes:
Community portals for architecture-based middleware P2P.
340-341
- José Ramón Gil-García, Sehl Mellouli, Celene Navarrete, Hans Jochen Scholl, Theresa A. Pardo, Anthony M. Cresswell, Lei Zheng:
Integration and interoperation at the border states in North America: a status report.
342-343
- Judith Bayard Cushing, Sharon S. Dawes:
Plenary panel: digital government research what we have learned about forging successful DG research projects.
344-346
- David F. Andersen, José Ramón Gil-García, Réjean Roy, Theresa A. Pardo, Lei Zheng:
Creating an international research team: lessons from the North American digital government working group.
347
- Sharon S. Dawes, Natalie Helbig:
Building a sustainable international digital government research community.
348-349
- Teresa M. Harrison:
Panel proposal: state of the art perspectives on health information technology.
350
- Peter Muhlberger:
New research on public deliberation and information technology.
351-353
- Willem Pieterson, Bram Klievink, Marijn Janssen:
Multi-channel management: putting it into practice.
354-355
- Janice Warner:
Social networking -- technology, tools, and applications: a hands-on tutorial to make the most of the conference.
356
- José Ramón Gil-García:
Using partial least squares (PLS) for digital government research.
357-358
- John W. Dickey:
Half-day tutorial: describing, building, and using the public administration genome (PAG).
359-360
- Hans Jochen Scholl:
Mobile computing in the public sector: practices, opportunities, and arduous challenges.
361-363
- Noshir S. Contractor:
Understanding & enabling networks in digital government.
364-365
Copyright © Mon Mar 15 03:32:19 2010
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)