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Challenges of Expanding Internet: E-Commerce, E-Business, and E-Government

5th IFIP Conference on e-Commerce, e-Business, and e-Government (I3E'2005), October 28-30 2005, Poznan, Poland

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2005

Overview

  • Provides the most relevant and highly up-to-date summary of problems and suitable solutions in areas of applications supporting commerce, business and government activities
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology (IFIPAICT, volume 189)

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Table of contents (40 papers)

  1. Innovative Business Models

  2. e-Collaboration and e-Services

  3. G2G, G2B, and G2C Models

  4. One-Stop Government — Service Integration

  5. e-Government - Trust and Security

  6. e-Health and e-Democracy

Keywords

About this book

2.1 E-Government: e-Governance and e-Democracy The term Electronic Government (e-Government), as an expression, was coined after the example of Electronic Commerce. In spite of being a relatively recent expression, e-Government designates a field of activity that has been with us for several decades and which has attained a high level of penetration in many countries2. What has been observed over the recent years is a shift on the broadness of the e-Government concept. The ideas inside e-Governance and e- Democracy are to some extent promising big changes in public administration. The demand now is not only simply delivering a service - line. It is to deliver complex and new services, which are all citizen-centric. Another important demand is related to the improvement of citizen's participation in governmental processes and decisions so that the governments' transparency and legitimacy are enforced. In order to fulfill these new demands, a lot of research has been done over the recent years (see Section 3) but many challenges are still to be faced, not only in the technological field, but also in the political and social aspects.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Hitachi Ltd., Japan

    Matohisa Funabashi

  • Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland

    Adam Grzech

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