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Electronic Government

Second International Conference, EGOV 2003, Prague, Czech Republic, September 1-5, 2003, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2003

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 2739)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: EGOV 2003.

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Table of contents (95 papers)

  1. Models and Methodology of e-Government Research

  2. Trust and Security

  3. Knowledge Management

Other volumes

  1. Electronic Government

Keywords

About this book

The EGOV Conference Series intends to assess the state of the art in e-Gove- ment and to provide guidance for research and development in this fast-moving ?eld. The annual conferences bring together leading research experts and p- fessionals from all over the globe. Thus, EGOV 2003 in Prague built on the achievements of the 1st EGOV Conference (Aix-en-Provence, 2002), which p- vided an illustrative overview of e-Government activities. This year the interest even increased: nearly 100 contributions, and authors coming from 34 countries. In this way EGOV Conference 2003 was a reunion for professionals from all over the globe. EGOV 2003 brought some changes in the outline and structure of the c- ference. In line with the broadening of the ?eld and a growing number of s- missions it became necessary to decentralize the reviewing process. So reviewing was done via stream chairs who deserve high praise for their dedicated work. In addition, a workshop part was included to cover some subjects of emerging signi?cance, such as dissemination, networking, and regional developments. F- ther, a subtitle of the conference was chosen that would mirror the expansion of e-Government to e-Governance. Consequently, in this year’s conference gov- nance, democratic deliberation and legal issues occupied a growing share. Last, but not least, GIS was incorporated as a topic due to the increasing importance of geographical information systems for planning and operations.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Institute of Informatics in Business and Government, University of Linz, Linz, Austria

    Roland Traunmüller

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