Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government

E-government evolution has been described as a government’s internal process of digital development, which eventually transforms its ability to respond to the public. As time goes by and these promised benefits have yet to fully materialize, civic technology—online tools that aim to achieve improved...

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Main Author: Emily Shaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Danube-University Krems 2018-12-01
Series:JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/455
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spelling doaj-d1539358a2f24533a44d90191efca4682020-11-24T21:39:05ZengDanube-University KremsJeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government2075-95172018-12-01102749610.29379/jedem.v10i1.455278Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-GovernmentEmily Shaw0Johns Hopkins UniversityE-government evolution has been described as a government’s internal process of digital development, which eventually transforms its ability to respond to the public. As time goes by and these promised benefits have yet to fully materialize, civic technology—online tools that aim to achieve improved online interaction between governments and the public—is sometimes placed in the gap. This study provides findings from 38 interviews across five US municipal civic technology implementations, answering the question of whether US cities which have adopted civic technology tools enjoy improved two-way interactions between governments and the public, and also whether an “interaction-first” approach to government digitization appears to spur additional e-government development. By selecting five very different tool implementations, the research design employs Mill’s Method of Difference to isolate commonalities springing simply from a municipality’s implementation of a civic technology tool. Interviews reveal a range of common effects beyond the simple improvement of the service-delivery experience.https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/455civic technologye-governmentmunicipal government
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emily Shaw
spellingShingle Emily Shaw
Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
civic technology
e-government
municipal government
author_facet Emily Shaw
author_sort Emily Shaw
title Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
title_short Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
title_full Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
title_fullStr Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
title_full_unstemmed Skipping Ahead to the Good Part: The Role of Civic Technology in Achieving the Promise of E-Government
title_sort skipping ahead to the good part: the role of civic technology in achieving the promise of e-government
publisher Danube-University Krems
series JeDEM - eJournal of eDemocracy & Open Government
issn 2075-9517
publishDate 2018-12-01
description E-government evolution has been described as a government’s internal process of digital development, which eventually transforms its ability to respond to the public. As time goes by and these promised benefits have yet to fully materialize, civic technology—online tools that aim to achieve improved online interaction between governments and the public—is sometimes placed in the gap. This study provides findings from 38 interviews across five US municipal civic technology implementations, answering the question of whether US cities which have adopted civic technology tools enjoy improved two-way interactions between governments and the public, and also whether an “interaction-first” approach to government digitization appears to spur additional e-government development. By selecting five very different tool implementations, the research design employs Mill’s Method of Difference to isolate commonalities springing simply from a municipality’s implementation of a civic technology tool. Interviews reveal a range of common effects beyond the simple improvement of the service-delivery experience.
topic civic technology
e-government
municipal government
url https://jedem.org/index.php/jedem/article/view/455
work_keys_str_mv AT emilyshaw skippingaheadtothegoodparttheroleofcivictechnologyinachievingthepromiseofegovernment
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