Cover image for ICT, Public Administration and Democracy in the Coming Decade.
ICT, Public Administration and Democracy in the Coming Decade.
Title:
ICT, Public Administration and Democracy in the Coming Decade.
Author:
Meijer, A. J.
ISBN:
9781614992448
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (164 pages)
Series:
Innovation and the Public Sector ; v.20

Innovation and the Public Sector
Contents:
Title Page -- Introduction -- Section 1. The Past and the Present Situation as Starting Point for Thinking About the Future -- Forward to the Past: Lessons for the Future of E-Government from the Story so Far -- The Information Polity: Towards a Two Speed Future? -- E-Government Is Dead: Long Live Public Administration 2.0 -- Surveillance as X-Ray -- Section 2. The Future Implications of E-Government for Government Institutions -- Towards a Smart State? Inter-Agency Collaboration, Information Integration, and Beyond -- The Social Media Innovation Challenge in the Public Sector -- A Good Man but a Bad Wizard. About the Limits and Future of Transparency of Democratic Governments -- The Do It Yourself State - The Future of Participatory Democracy -- Section 3. The Future Implications for Our E-Government Research and Practice -- Five Trends That Matter: Challenges to 21st Century Electronic Government -- Why Does E-Government Look as It Does? Looking Beyond the Explanatory Emptiness of the E-Government Concept -- Big Questions of E-Government Research.
Abstract:
The physicist Neils Bohr allegedly wrote that "Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future". Many academics believe that serious scholars should never attempt to write about the future, but some awareness of the ways in which the future of e-government may evolve is needed if well-grounded long-term decisions about issues such as infrastructures, institutions and educational programs are to be made. In addition, future-oriented research is of the utmost importance for informed public debate about technological developments with far reaching societal implications. This book marks the 25th anniversary of the permanent study group on e-government of the European Group for Public Administration, and the papers here were first presented at their 2012 meeting in Bucharest, Romania. The invited authors were not asked for rigorous analyses based on systematic empirical research or deeply rooted in a theoretical framework; instead they were challenged to write thoughtful and measured, but provocative, essays about ICT and public administration in the coming decade. Their contributions are reflections on the nature of new and emerging technologies in the public sector and their impact on government and on democracy itself. The book is divided into three sections: the past and present as starting point for thinking about the future of e-government, imagining the future of government, and implications for research and practice. The many questions raised by developments in ICT for future public administration are presented in a clear and thought-provoking manner, and merit more debate. This volume represents a departure from the normal run of academic publications. It is intended both to provoke academics and administrators to think about questions which will affect all of our futures and to offer a range of creative ideas about how the

opportunities presented by technology can be exploited to provide better government and governance.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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