ISSN 1479-439X

First published
in 2003




 

  Electronic Journal of e-Government
 

Papers in Current Issue

    Home Papers in Current Issue Previous Issues Site Map
     

Home
About the Journal
Scope
Editorial Board
Submission Guidelines
Call for Papers

 

For information on the European Conference on e-Government, click here

For information on the International Conference on e-Government, click here
 

 
.

Volume 7 Issue 1

Examining the Barriers to e-Government Adoption
Richard W. Schwester
City University of New York, USA

   

e-Government initially began as the process whereby government entities developed websites and began populating these sites with information. After mastering this information dissemination aspect, government units moved toward processing online transactions. Subsequent to mastering transaction processing, governments moved across a continuum and engaged citizens online in a participatory framework; that is, offering Internet applications that connect citizens with public administrators, decision-makers, and perhaps elected officials. While the subsequent progression and potential benefits of e-government applications are without limits, there are a number of barriers that impede the implementation of such applications. Using survey data collected by the International City/County Management Association (ICMA), this paper examines the factors that most impede the adoption of e-government applications. Central research questions include: what are the differences between municipalities that have comprehensive e-government platforms and those that do not, and to what extent do certain barriers explain these differences? Multiple regression results indicate that e-government adoption is a function of financial, technical, and human resources. Holding all other factors constant, municipalities with higher operating budgets, more full-time IT staff, and technical resources are more likely to implement a comprehensive e-government platform. Political support is a key and fairly robust determinant of municipal e-government adoption as well.

Keywords: e-Government adoption, municipalities, barriers, service delivery, information dissemination, citizen participation

Download FULL PAPER

Back to Contents

Home Papers in Current Issue Previous Issues Site Map

EJEG is published by Academic Conferences Limited
Curtis Farm, Kidmore End, Nr Reading RG4 9AY, England
Tel: +44 (0)1189 724148, Fax: +44 (0)1189 724691, Email: info@ejeg.com

To send questions/comments about this site to the webmaster, jen@itdesigners.com
Copyright © 2002-2004 Electronic Journal of e-Government
Last modified: September 04, 2005