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This book explores the world of e-government - the use by government of IT to interact with citizens, businesses, and other governments - and the significant role of IT corporations in this process in seven countries. Government information systems are big business (around 1.5% of GDP) and critical to all aspects of public policy and operations.
Zusatztext ...an important new book... Informationen zum Autor Patrick Dunleavy is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has authored and edited numerous books on political science theory, British politics and urban politics, as well as more than 50 articles in professional journals. His publications include: the series Developments in British Politics (co-authored, Eighth edition, forthcoming 2006); Democracy, Bureaucracy and Public Choice (Harvester-Wheatsheaf, 1992); Theories of the State: The Politics of Liberal Democracy (Palgrave, 1987). He also edited the journals Political Studies and Political Studies Review for the UK Political Studies Association for six years (1999-2005), with Jane Tinkler and others. Helen Margetts is a Professor at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, before which she was Director of the School of Public Policy at UCL. Previously she worked as a lecturer at Birkbeck College (1994-99), a researcher at the LSE (1990-94), and as a systems analyst and computer programmer in the private sector (1984-89). She is a political scientist specialising in the implications for government of use of the Internet and related information technologies. She has published widely in this area including (with Patrick Dunleavy) two studies of Government on the Web for the UK National Audit Office (1999 and 2002), the book Information Technology in Government (Routledge, 1999) and a forthcoming book with Christopher Hood Tools of Government in the Digital Age (Palgrave, 2006) Klappentext This book explores the world of e-government - the use by government of IT to interact with citizens, businesses, and other governments - and the significant role of IT corporations in this process in seven countries. Government information systems are big business (around 1.5% of GDP) and critical to all aspects of public policy and operations. Zusammenfassung This book explores the world of e-government - the use by government of IT to interact with citizens, businesses, and other governments - and the significant role of IT corporations in this process in seven countries. Government information systems are big business (around 1.5% of GDP) and critical to all aspects of public policy and operations. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Information Technology and Public Policymaking 1: The Theory of Modern Bureaucracy and the Neglected Role of IT 2: Acquiring and Managing Government IT 3: The Comparative Performance of Government IT 4: Explaining Performance I: Government Institutions, New Public Management and Bureaucratic Cultures 5: Explaining Performance II: Competitive Tension and the Power of the IT Industry 6: Taxation: Re-Modernizing Legacy IT and Getting Taxpayers Online 7: Social Security: Managing Mass Payment and Responding to Welfare State Change 8: Immigration: Technology Changes and Adminstrative Renewal 9: New Public Management is Dead - Long Live Digital Era Governance Afterword: Looking Ahead on Technology Trends, Industry Organization, and Government IT ...
...an important new book...
Auteur
Patrick Dunleavy is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has authored and edited numerous books on political science theory, British politics and urban politics, as well as more than 50 articles in professional journals. His publications include: the series Developments in British Politics (co-authored, Eighth edition, forthcoming 2006); Democracy, Bureaucracy and Public Choice (Harvester-Wheatsheaf, 1992); Theories of the State: The Politics of Liberal Democracy (Palgrave, 1987). He also edited the journals Political Studies and Political Studies Review for the UK Political Studies Association for six years (1999-2005), with Jane Tinkler and others. Helen Margetts is a Professor at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, before which she was Director of the School of Public Policy at UCL. Previously she worked as a lecturer at Birkbeck College (1994-99), a researcher at the LSE (1990-94), and as a systems analyst and computer programmer in the private sector (1984-89). She is a political scientist specialising in the implications for government of use of the Internet and related information technologies. She has published widely in this area including (with Patrick Dunleavy) two studies of Government on the Web for the UK National Audit Office (1999 and 2002), the book Information Technology in Government (Routledge, 1999) and a forthcoming book with Christopher Hood Tools of Government in the Digital Age (Palgrave, 2006)
Contenu
Introduction: Information Technology and Public Policymaking
1: The Theory of Modern Bureaucracy and the Neglected Role of IT
2: Acquiring and Managing Government IT
3: The Comparative Performance of Government IT
4: Explaining Performance I: Government Institutions, New Public Management and Bureaucratic Cultures
5: Explaining Performance II: Competitive Tension and the Power of the IT Industry
6: Taxation: Re-Modernizing Legacy IT and Getting Taxpayers Online
7: Social Security: Managing Mass Payment and Responding to Welfare State Change
8: Immigration: Technology Changes and Adminstrative Renewal
9: New Public Management is Dead - Long Live Digital Era Governance
Afterword: Looking Ahead on Technology Trends, Industry Organization, and Government IT