Books > Computing & IT > Computer communications & networking
|
Buy Now
Enacting Electronic Government Success - An Integrative Study of Government-wide Websites, Organizational Capabilities, and Institutions (Hardcover, 2012)
Loot Price: R2,955
Discovery Miles 29 550
|
|
Enacting Electronic Government Success - An Integrative Study of Government-wide Websites, Organizational Capabilities, and Institutions (Hardcover, 2012)
Series: Integrated Series in Information Systems, 31
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Many countries around the world are investing a great amount of
resources in government IT initiatives. However, few of these
projects achieve their stated goals and some of them are complete
failures. Therefore, understanding e-government success has become
very important and urgent in recent years. In order to develop
relevant knowledge about this complex phenomenon, researchers and
practitioners need to identify and assess what are the main
conditions, variables, or factors that have an impact on
e-government success. However, before being able to evaluate these
impacts, it is necessary to define what e-government success is and
what some e-government success measures are. This book presents a
review of both e-government success measures and e-government
success factors. It also provides empirical evidence from
quantitative analysis and two in-depth case studies. Although based
on sound theory and rigorous empirical analysis, the book not only
significantly contributes to academic knowledge, but also includes
some practical recommendations for government officials and public
managers. Theoretically, the book proposes a way to quantitatively
operationalize Fountain's enactment framework. Based on the
institutional tradition, the technology enactment framework
attempts to explain the effects of organizational forms and
institutional arrangements on the information technology used by
government agencies. According to Fountain (1995; 2001) the
technology enactment framework pays attention to the relationships
among information technology, organizations, embeddedness, and
institutions. This framework is very well known in the e-government
field, but is normally used for qualitative analysis and there is
no previous proposal of how to use it with quantitative data. The
book proposes variables to measure each of the different constructs
in this framework and also tests the relationships hypothesized by
Fountain's theory. Finally, using the advantages of the selected
quantitative analysis technique (Partial Least Squares), the study
also proposes some adjustments and extensions to the original
framework in a theory building effort. Methodologically, the book
reports on one of the first multi-method studies in the field of
e-government in general and e-government success in particular.
This study uses a nested research design, which combines
statistical analysis with two in depth case studies. The study
begins with a statistical analysis using organizational,
institutional, and contextual factors as the independent variables.
An overall score representing e-government success in terms of the
functionality of state websites is the dependent variable. Second,
based on the statistical results two cases are selected based on
their relative fitness to the model (residuals) and their position
in the general ranking of website functionality (which includes
four different measures). In order to complement the results of the
statistical analysis, case studies were developed for the two
selected states (New York and Indiana), using semi-structured
interviews and document analysis. In terms of the statistical
analysis, the book constitutes one of the first applications of
Partial Least Squares (PLS) to an e-government success study. PLS
is a structural equations modeling (SEM) technique and, therefore,
allows estimating the measurement model and the structural model
simultaneously. The use of this sophisticated statistical strategy
helped to test the relationships between e-government success and
different factors influencing it, as well as some of the
relationships between several of the factors, thus allowing
exploring some indirect effects too.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.