"This book provides special attention to the most successful practices for implementing e-government technologies, highlighting the benefits of well designed systems in this field, while investigating the implications of poor practices and designs"--
Editors Saeed (Bahria U. Islamabad, Pakistan), Reddick (U. of Texas at San Antonio), and 38 contributors explore and discuss the most successful ways in which e-government technologies are implemented, the advantages of well designed systems, and the consequences of poor methods and designs. Topics include: trends in government ITC adoption and barriers, authentication mechanisms for e-voting, an assessment for assessing e-government systems, social media and citizen engagement, e-government public service delivery, and more. The book would be useful for researchers, academics, government officials, and others in information systems design for e-government. Annotation ©2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)