In this paper we examine the ways in which implementing new information and communication technologies (ICTs) to automate public sector processes affects accountability. New technologies alter conventional modes of behavior in the public sector, shedding light on certain areas of bureaucratic practice and obscuring others, and in doing so they enhance accountability and exacerbate dysfunctions. To investigate how ICTs influence the accountability equation, we explore a range of empirically documented e-government implementations, from simple transactions involving low-levels of automation to highly automated systems such as fingerprint analysis technologies. Drawing on these empirical examples, we develop a tentative framework of ICT-exacer...
Part 2: Open and Smart GovernmentInternational audienceA key objective of open government programs i...
Over the past several decades the demand for accountability in the field of public administration ha...
The paper provides an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have on...
In this paper we examine the ways in which implementing new information and communication technologi...
The official version of this paper is available on the Communications of the Association for Inform...
Purpose: The paper explores the implications of e-government for horizontal/social accountability (t...
none3To what extent do e-government influence accountability and performance in the public sector? G...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between performance monitoring te...
In evaluating government actions accountability fora depend on public records. ICTs can - depending ...
none1siOver the past decades, there has been a significant evolution of e-government, an overwhelmin...
The paper provides an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have on...
Under the global pressure of information technology, the adoption of web-based technologies in publi...
To what extent do e-government influence accountability and performance in the public sector? Given ...
Over the past several decades the demand for accountability in the field of public administration ha...
The chapter presents an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have ...
Part 2: Open and Smart GovernmentInternational audienceA key objective of open government programs i...
Over the past several decades the demand for accountability in the field of public administration ha...
The paper provides an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have on...
In this paper we examine the ways in which implementing new information and communication technologi...
The official version of this paper is available on the Communications of the Association for Inform...
Purpose: The paper explores the implications of e-government for horizontal/social accountability (t...
none3To what extent do e-government influence accountability and performance in the public sector? G...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between performance monitoring te...
In evaluating government actions accountability fora depend on public records. ICTs can - depending ...
none1siOver the past decades, there has been a significant evolution of e-government, an overwhelmin...
The paper provides an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have on...
Under the global pressure of information technology, the adoption of web-based technologies in publi...
To what extent do e-government influence accountability and performance in the public sector? Given ...
Over the past several decades the demand for accountability in the field of public administration ha...
The chapter presents an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have ...
Part 2: Open and Smart GovernmentInternational audienceA key objective of open government programs i...
Over the past several decades the demand for accountability in the field of public administration ha...
The paper provides an account of the likely consequences that performance monitoring systems have on...