For most British citizens, the government web domain is their first point of contact with the state – and it can be confusing. The Labour government tried to update it by developing government ‘supersites’. Yet Jane Tinkler finds that recent statistics show that the central government is spending around £130m per year to generate somewhat less than 550 million visits to its sites. And the quality of information facing citizens and business still varies a great deal
Government’s procurement and management of large IT projects has been patchy in the last decade, wit...
A significant amount of taxpayers’ money is being spent in central and local government in introduci...
Over the past decade the World Wide Web has become a core platform for the electronic operation of g...
This report by the Oxford Internet Institute and the LSE Public Policy Group looks at the progress m...
This report looked at the progress made by government in delivering services and information online ...
This article empirically assesses the relationship between government use of the web, service perfor...
Government's use of the Web in the UK is prolific and a wide range of services are now available tho...
Local governments have been developing online services, aiming to better serve the public and reduce...
Webportals – websites that operate as front doors or guides into government on the web – are central...
Webportals - websites that operate as front doors or guides into government on the web - are central...
The internet is now a ubiquitous force in our lives, with more than four fifths of the UK population...
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from t...
Local and municipal governments worldwide are embracing and using the Internet to deliver services a...
Does increased Internet access lead to higher levels of governmental transparency? In new resealed, ...
In mid-1998 approximately 7.3 million people in the UK had access to the Internet and the World Wide...
Government’s procurement and management of large IT projects has been patchy in the last decade, wit...
A significant amount of taxpayers’ money is being spent in central and local government in introduci...
Over the past decade the World Wide Web has become a core platform for the electronic operation of g...
This report by the Oxford Internet Institute and the LSE Public Policy Group looks at the progress m...
This report looked at the progress made by government in delivering services and information online ...
This article empirically assesses the relationship between government use of the web, service perfor...
Government's use of the Web in the UK is prolific and a wide range of services are now available tho...
Local governments have been developing online services, aiming to better serve the public and reduce...
Webportals – websites that operate as front doors or guides into government on the web – are central...
Webportals - websites that operate as front doors or guides into government on the web - are central...
The internet is now a ubiquitous force in our lives, with more than four fifths of the UK population...
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from t...
Local and municipal governments worldwide are embracing and using the Internet to deliver services a...
Does increased Internet access lead to higher levels of governmental transparency? In new resealed, ...
In mid-1998 approximately 7.3 million people in the UK had access to the Internet and the World Wide...
Government’s procurement and management of large IT projects has been patchy in the last decade, wit...
A significant amount of taxpayers’ money is being spent in central and local government in introduci...
Over the past decade the World Wide Web has become a core platform for the electronic operation of g...