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Most recent edit on 2006-03-23 18:22:07 by LingyunWu

Additions:

Our Works

Research project supported by The State Council Informatization Office
Research project supported by State Information Center

Publications

Books
  1. X.-S. Zhang and L. Du. E-Government and Its Strategy Planning. Science Press, Beijing, 2004. (in Chinese)

Publications - E-Government



Books


  1. Xiang-Sun Zhang and Lian Du. E-Government and Its Strategy Planning. Science Press, Beijing, 2004. (In Chinese)
  2. Xiang-Sun Zhang, Q.-Z. Zhao and F.-A. Liu. Management Information System: System Theory and Planning. Science Press, Beijing, 2001. (In Chinese)

Refereed Journal Articles


  1. Xiang-Sun Zhang and Lian Du. The strategic planning method of E-Government. Blue Book of Electronic Government: China E-Government Development Report, No. 1, pp. 151-166, Social Science Documentation Publishing House, Beijing, 2003.

Proceedings Articles


  1. Zhong-Wei Zhan, Yong Wang, Ling-Yun Wu and Xiang-Sun Zhang. Evaluation of E-Government services based on data envelopment analysis. Proceedings of ORSC 2004, pp:348-354, Global-Link Publishing Company, 2004. (In Chinese)


CategoryPublication




Edited on 2005-09-15 14:21:39 by LingyunWu

Additions:

E-Government

What is E-Government

Projects

Publications



Deletions:

E-Government

What is E-Government

Projects

Publications





Edited on 2005-05-11 13:03:29 by JinshanLi

Additions:

E-Government


What is E-Government

The World Bank Group's definition
E-Government refers to the use by government agencies of information technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government. These technologies can serve a variety of different ends: better delivery of government services to citizens, improved interactions with business and industry, citizen empowerment through access to information, or more efficient government management. The resulting benefits can be less corruption, increased transparency, greater convenience, revenue growth, and/or cost reductions.
Traditionally, the interaction between a citizen or business and a government agency took place in a government office. With emerging information and communication technologies it is possible to locate service centers closer to the clients. Such centers may consist of an unattended kiosk in the government agency, a service kiosk located close to the client, or the use of a personal computer in the home or office.
Analogous to e-commerce, which allows businesses to transact with each other more efficiently (B2B) and brings customers closer to businesses (B2C), e-government aims to make the interaction between government and citizens (G2C), government and business enterprises (G2B), and inter-agency relationships (G2G) more friendly, convenient, transparent, and inexpensive.
E-Commerce has evolved already through four stages: 1) publishing, 2) interactivity, 3) completing transactions, and 4) delivery. To date, most e-government activity has centered on publishing. A study by Anderson Consulting finds vast differences among countries in the maturity of their e-government effort. Perhaps the key finding, however, is that even the most mature countries have tapped less than 20% of the potential.
Importance of E-Government

Projects

Research project supported by The State Council Informatization Office
Research project supported by State Information Center

Publications

Books
  1. X.-S. Zhang and L. Du. E-Government and Its Strategy Planning. Science Press, Beijing, 2004. (in Chinese)
Circular reference detected


Deletions:

E-Government



What is E-Government


The World Bank Group's definition

E-Government refers to the use by government agencies of information technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government. These technologies can serve a variety of different ends: better delivery of government services to citizens, improved interactions with business and industry, citizen empowerment through access to information, or more efficient government management. The resulting benefits can be less corruption, increased transparency, greater convenience, revenue growth, and/or cost reductions.

Traditionally, the interaction between a citizen or business and a government agency took place in a government office. With emerging information and communication technologies it is possible to locate service centers closer to the clients. Such centers may consist of an unattended kiosk in the government agency, a service kiosk located close to the client, or the use of a personal computer in the home or office.

Analogous to e-commerce, which allows businesses to transact with each other more efficiently (B2B) and brings customers closer to businesses (B2C), e-government aims to make the interaction between government and citizens (G2C), government and business enterprises (G2B), and inter-agency relationships (G2G) more friendly, convenient, transparent, and inexpensive.

E-Commerce has evolved already through four stages: 1) publishing, 2) interactivity, 3) completing transactions, and 4) delivery. To date, most e-government activity has centered on publishing. A study by Anderson Consulting finds vast differences among countries in the maturity of their e-government effort. Perhaps the key finding, however, is that even the most mature countries have tapped less than 20% of the potential.

Importance of E-Government



Projects


Research project supported by The State Council Informatization Office


Research project supported by State Information Center



Publications


Books

  1. X.-S. Zhang and L. Du. E-Government and Its Strategy Planning. Science Press, Beijing, 2004. (in Chinese)

Circular reference detected




Edited on 2005-01-12 19:00:23 by LingyunWu

Additions:

What is E-Government

The World Bank Group's definition
E-Government refers to the use by government agencies of information technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government. These technologies can serve a variety of different ends: better delivery of government services to citizens, improved interactions with business and industry, citizen empowerment through access to information, or more efficient government management. The resulting benefits can be less corruption, increased transparency, greater convenience, revenue growth, and/or cost reductions.
Traditionally, the interaction between a citizen or business and a government agency took place in a government office. With emerging information and communication technologies it is possible to locate service centers closer to the clients. Such centers may consist of an unattended kiosk in the government agency, a service kiosk located close to the client, or the use of a personal computer in the home or office.
Analogous to e-commerce, which allows businesses to transact with each other more efficiently (B2B) and brings customers closer to businesses (B2C), e-government aims to make the interaction between government and citizens (G2C), government and business enterprises (G2B), and inter-agency relationships (G2G) more friendly, convenient, transparent, and inexpensive.
E-Commerce has evolved already through four stages: 1) publishing, 2) interactivity, 3) completing transactions, and 4) delivery. To date, most e-government activity has centered on publishing. A study by Anderson Consulting finds vast differences among countries in the maturity of their e-government effort. Perhaps the key finding, however, is that even the most mature countries have tapped less than 20% of the potential.
Importance of E-Government





Edited on 2005-01-07 19:57:25 by LingyunWu

Additions:

Projects

Research project supported by The State Council Informatization Office
Research project supported by State Information Center

Publications


Circular reference detected
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