This volume critically explores the contentions in the emerging
debate surrounding new media technologies and the extent to which
they are challenging traditional political and government
models.
Examining a range of citizen/government interactions which
together form e-government in different contexts, this book
assesses the potential of new media technologies to facilitate new
institutional patterns for governance and participation, as
experienced primarily, but not only, across Europe. Analysing a
range of challenges spanning from those of a technological and
conceptual nature to those of a more political and legal nature,
the authors scrutinise the central policies at governmental and
organisational levels and consider the following questions:
- Is society driving or responding to e-government and is it
ready to cope with it?
- What implications does e-government have for the
power/democracy relationship?
- Is the technology right for e-government? What is needed to
ensure government services are delivered optimally?
- How is e-government perceived and is it trusted?
- How are the sensitive issues of identity, privacy and social
inclusion dealt with?
- How are management and safety dealt with when one considers
issues such as activism, cyberterrorism, biometrics, and new
implications for international relations?
This comprehensive text will be of interest to students and
scholars of public policy, politics, media and communication
studies, sociology, law and European studies. It will also offer
insights of relevance to practitioners and policy-makers in
regional, national, and transnational governance, reform and
innovation.
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!