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Electronic Government Research
eGovernment research at Örebro University is concerned with the application, development and evaluation of IT systems relevant for society, especially the public sector. Our research, national as well as international, is carried out in collaboration with our partners in the government, enterprise and civil society sectors. We apply individual, organizational as well as societal perspectives on information systems and their development and role in society. We are studying, among other things, the use and development of Enterprise Architecture (EA) in municipal activities, information security in public activities, development and adaptation of the methods of systems development and evaluation, eLearning in developing countries, decision support systems, adjustment of municipal decision-making, eParticipation, and requirements engineering.
The most influential eGovernment researcher is found in ÖrebroIn a recent study (Erman & Todorovski, 2009) Åke Grönlund of the Informatics department at Swedish Business School at Örebro University was found to be the most influential eGovernment researcher. The study is based on number of citations and encompasses the period 2005-2008. The study is found in: Erman, N., Todorovski, L. (2009) Mapping the E-Government Research with Social Network Analysis. In M.A. Wimmer et al. (Eds.): EGOV 2009, LNCS 5693, pp. 13–25, 2009. (c) Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2009 Announcement Honorary DoctorAnn Macintosh is according to most commentators one of the most renowned researchers in the world within the field of “eParticipation”, i.e. the use of information and communication technologies to broaden and deepen political participation by enabling citizens to connect with one another and with their elected representatives. This is today a dynamic field high on the EU agenda and, a pioneer in the field, Ann Macintosh has had a great influence through numerous research and development projects, participation in policy making in, for example, the EU and the OECD, and expert advisor to governments, e.g. the UK Cabinet Office, Canada and Australia. eParticipation is a multidisciplinary field including technical as well as social sciences, and Ann Macintosh’s research is focused on the interplay between humans, technology, and organizations; a field both fruitful and complicated. In 1999 Ann Macintosh founded the International Teledemocracy Centre (ITC) at Napier University in Edinburgh, Scotland, where she held the position as Director and scientific leader until 2007 when she was appointed Professor of Digital Governance and Co-Director of the Centre for Digital Citizenship at the Institute of Communications Studies, University of Leeds. She has published over 50 peer reviewed research articles in the eParticipation field. Örebro University is proud to welcome Ann Macintosh as Honorary Doctor. http://ics.leeds.ac.uk/details.cfm?id=110 Related Events
- SWEG '10 - Scandinavian Workshop on e-Government, Jan 27-28 2010 (Call for papers) This page was last updated Dec. 08, 2009 |
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