|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This book provides key strategic principles and best practices to
guide the design and implementation of digital government
strategies. It provides a series of recommendations and findings to
think about IT applications in government as a platform for
information, services and collaboration, and strategies to avoid
identified pitfalls. Digital government research suggests that
information technologies have the potential to generate immense
public value and transform the relationships between governments,
citizens, businesses and other stakeholders. However, developing
innovative and high impact solutions for citizens hinges on the
development of strategic institutional, organizational and
technical capabilities. Thus far, particular characteristics and
problems of the public sector organization promote the development
of poorly integrated and difficult to maintain applications. For
example, governments maintain separate applications for open data,
transparency, and public services, leading to duplication of
efforts and a waste of resources. The costs associated with
maintaining such sets of poorly integrated systems may limit the
use of resources to future projects and innovation. This book
provides best practices and recommendations based on extensive
research in both Mexico and the United States on how governments
can develop a digital government strategy for creating public
value, how to finance digital innovation in the public sector, how
to building successful collaboration networks and foster citizen
engagement, and how to correctly implement open government projects
and open data. It will be of interest to researchers,
practitioners, students, and public sector IT professionals that
work in the design and implementation of technology-based projects
and programs.
This book provides key strategic principles and best practices to
guide the design and implementation of digital government
strategies. It provides a series of recommendations and findings to
think about IT applications in government as a platform for
information, services and collaboration, and strategies to avoid
identified pitfalls. Digital government research suggests that
information technologies have the potential to generate immense
public value and transform the relationships between governments,
citizens, businesses and other stakeholders. However, developing
innovative and high impact solutions for citizens hinges on the
development of strategic institutional, organizational and
technical capabilities. Thus far, particular characteristics and
problems of the public sector organization promote the development
of poorly integrated and difficult to maintain applications. For
example, governments maintain separate applications for open data,
transparency, and public services, leading to duplication of
efforts and a waste of resources. The costs associated with
maintaining such sets of poorly integrated systems may limit the
use of resources to future projects and innovation. This book
provides best practices and recommendations based on extensive
research in both Mexico and the United States on how governments
can develop a digital government strategy for creating public
value, how to finance digital innovation in the public sector, how
to building successful collaboration networks and foster citizen
engagement, and how to correctly implement open government projects
and open data. It will be of interest to researchers,
practitioners, students, and public sector IT professionals that
work in the design and implementation of technology-based projects
and programs.
|
|