Connect with Digital Government
Digital Government Society of North America

Plans Underway for dg.o 2012 Conference

"Bridging Research and Practice" will be held June 4-7, 2012, in College Park, Maryland.

 

 
E-Government Reference Library version 7.5

E-Government Reference Library version 7.5 Released

We herewith announce and make available version 7.5 (December 15, 2011) of the E-Government Reference Library (EGRL) in a ZIP file containing editions in BibTeX, EndNoteTM XML, a full EndNoteTM lib, PDF, and RTF formats. A Zortero edition can be accessed under https://www.zotero.org/groups/e-government/items

Version 7.5 of the EGRL now contains 4,674 references of predominantly English language, peer-reviewed work. The number of qualifying references in the library has increased by 390, or 9.1% over version 7.0 (March 15, 2011).

The EGRL has developed into an indispensable tool for e-Gov scholars. In particular, reviewing paper submissions was reported to now heavily rely on this reference library.

In order to download the library, please register (or re-register, for repeat downloads) yourself and accept the GPL license agreement. As stated above we provide the references in various editions (BibTeX, EndNote, Zortero, PDF, and RTF).

As an author or co-author please check all your own entries for completeness and correctness. Please get back to us in case of any errors or omissions. Thank you for your interest and cooperation.

You can access and download the E-Government Reference Library (EGRL) version 7.5 under https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/jscholl/22768


Dr. Hans J (Jochen) Scholl, MBA
Associate Professor
University of Washington
The Information School
Mary Gates Hall, Suite 370C
MS 352840
Seattle, WA 98195-2840, USA

 
President's Welcome Message

President's Welcome Message

President’s Inaugural Message to the Digital Government Society of North America

January 6, 2012

Digital Government has entered a transformational phase. Advances in technologies, the unprecedented availability of government data, the development of policy frameworks, and global economic crises have created opportunities to rethink how we govern; how citizens engage with governments; how governments and citizens develop policies and implement solutions that effect change in their communities, and how governments and businesses collaborate to create new economies. From Smart Cities to global issues regarding health, the environment, and education, to name a few, digital government has never been more exciting and vibrant than now.

These opportunities also come with challenges for governments, businesses, and citizens, such as:

 

·      Policy structures and frameworks that facilitate engagement, collaboration, and participation, while simultaneously ensuring privacy, security, an equitable access.

·      Technologies that offer immediate and ongoing interactions, but governance structures that are still developing in terms of using such interactions to effect change.

·      Unprecedented data availability that can offer insights into local, state, national, and international issues, foster economic development, and generate solutions to persistent problems.

·      Technology architectures that are secure, enable data sharing across and between governments, provide integrative citizen services, and offer efficiencies.

·      Ensuring business processes that reflect the integrative and collaborative nature of government, citizen, and business interactions.

 

The challenges are greater than any one community – research, industry, citizens – can resolve on their own. Moving forward, it is imperative that we seize the opportunities before us and work with governments and industry, with citizen input, to develop solutions and inform practice through digital government research. 

Our first three presidents, Sharon Dawes of SUNY Albany, Eduard Hovy of USC, and Jochen Scholl of UW, led the Digital Government Society of North America (DGSNA) from creation through to its current status. Their leadership successfully created DGSNA with a vision of establishing a vibrant digital government community of research and practice.  I enthusiastically thank our past three presidents for their substantial achievements in the development of DGSNA.

2012 also marks the transition of the DGSNA leadership and board. I extend my sincere appreciation to J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, Norman Jacknis, Andrew Philpot, Réjean Roy, Norman Sondheimer, and Christine Williams for their service on behalf of DGSNA as members of the Board over the last two years. And I extend my congratulations to the newly elected officers and Board members – Theresa Pardo (President-Elect), Luis F. Luna-Reyes (Secretary), and Andrea Kavanaugh (Treasurer), Yigan Arens (Board), Soon Ae Chun (Board), Sehl Meliouli (Board), and Scott Robertson (Board).  I look forward to working with such an innovative and respected group.

As DGSNA moves forward, it is time to reflect on its mission, goals, and objectives – and what the members want the Society to be. A critical strength of DGSNA is that it is an international organization that operates in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Another strength is the diverse and innovative research and practice interests that our members represent. And of course, we have the dg.o conference, now in its 13th year. These serve as strong foundations upon which we can continue to build the Society. Over the next year, we will engage the membership in a dialog about the next steps for DGSNA, and hope that you will join us in this collaborative undertaking.

This year the dg.o conference will take place at the University of Maryland College Park, in the United States, June 4-7, 2012 (see http://dgo2012.dgsna.org for more details). The conference brings together a leading international community of digital government researchers and practitioners. Our dg.o conference along with the HICSS e-Government Track, the IFIP EGOV conference, and the ICEGOV conference, are the top international conferences in Digital or Electronic Government. We hope that you will join us for dg.o 2012!

Finally, you will note that we have resumed our Society newsletter under the direction of Gabriel Puron Cid – many thanks to Gabriel for his work on this. We welcome news, announcements, information regarding research projects and studies, or other items of possible interest to the membership.

I wish all members of the Society and the wider DG community a very productive 2012.

Best wishes,

John Carlo Bertot, PhD

President, Digital Government Society of North America

 
2011 Society Election: Results

2011 Society Elections: Results

The 2011 Society Elections have concluded. Thank you for your participation.

Results

  • Constitutional Amendment -- approved
  • Officers:
    • President-Elect -- Theresa Pardo
    • Secretary -- Luis F. Luna-Reyes
    • Treasurer -- Andrea Kavanaugh
  • Board Members (top four vote getters will serve)
    • Soon Ae Chun -- elected (25)
    • Yigal Arens -- elected (17)
    • Sehl Mellouli -- elected (16)
    • Scott Robertson -- elected (15)
 
Past President's Farewell Message

Past President's Farewell Message

Past-President’s Farewell Message

January 7, 2012

Dear Members of the Digital Government Society of North America,

I am joining President John Bertot in warmly welcoming all new members to the DGSNA Board and emphatically thanking my predecessors and fellow past Board members for their excellent services to both the Society and the community.

Under the former Board’s and my tenure the Society had to cope with some serious challenges such as the expiration of NSF funding for our dg.o conferences. Also, we had to recover from the cancelation of the 2008 conference due to the swine flu incident in Mexico that year. We managed to orchestrate this transition with growing sophistication and created a new economic model for holding the dg.o conferences, which appears to be sustainable.

Since 2010 the Society’s dgonline newsletter has been published also in Spanish simultaneously with the English language version. Soon it will also be available in French, which will give the Society an even wider audience. In 2009, the Board responded to NSF SBE’s Directorate call for new ideas and comments with regard to “SBE 2020: Future Research in the Social, Behavioral & Economic Sciences.” The Society’s response has been cited numerous times in NSF SBE’s 2011 Mosaic report on the subject demonstrating that our voice is heard.

So, today the Society has grown stronger in membership, financial resources, and influence. Yet, a lot of work still remains to be done. However, this future work continues to be in very capable hands.

Upon my departure, I wish President John Bertot, President-elect Theresa Pardo, and the new Board the best of luck and wisdom for shaping the Society’s future course.

Best wishes,

Hans Jochen Scholl, PhD, MBA

Past-President, Digital Government Society of North America

 
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