TY - CONF
T1 - Predictors of On-line Services and e-Participation: A Cross-National Comparison
AU - Gulati, Jeff
AU - Williams, Christine B.
AU - Yates, David
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Effective e-government creates an environment for citizens to have greater access to their government and, in theory, makes citizen-to-government contact more inclusive. Our research examines two distinct but related measures of e-government effectiveness, namely the online service index and the e-participation index, both reported in the 2010 e-government survey conducted by the United Nations. We analyze the impact of political structure, administrative culture and policy initiatives on both indices in more than 150 countries. Our multiple regression analysis shows that there is greater e-government capability in countries that have an administrative culture of sound governance and policies that advance the development and diffusion of information and communication technologies. More democratic institutions and processes, however, appear to have a negative impact on e-government. In addition, countries that practice effective governance and promote competition in the telecommunications sector demonstrate more extensive provision of e-participation. These results suggest that the path to e-government leverages different strategies depending on a nation’s political structure, and that authoritarian countries may be utilizing e-government to maintain the status quo.
AB - Effective e-government creates an environment for citizens to have greater access to their government and, in theory, makes citizen-to-government contact more inclusive. Our research examines two distinct but related measures of e-government effectiveness, namely the online service index and the e-participation index, both reported in the 2010 e-government survey conducted by the United Nations. We analyze the impact of political structure, administrative culture and policy initiatives on both indices in more than 150 countries. Our multiple regression analysis shows that there is greater e-government capability in countries that have an administrative culture of sound governance and policies that advance the development and diffusion of information and communication technologies. More democratic institutions and processes, however, appear to have a negative impact on e-government. In addition, countries that practice effective governance and promote competition in the telecommunications sector demonstrate more extensive provision of e-participation. These results suggest that the path to e-government leverages different strategies depending on a nation’s political structure, and that authoritarian countries may be utilizing e-government to maintain the status quo.
UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0740624X14001269
M3 - Paper
SP - 526
EP - 533
ER -