[Air-l] E-Government CFP Reminder

Eric W. Welch ewwelch at uic.edu
Sat Mar 15 08:32:53 PST 2003


                     * * *  R E M I N D E R  * * *

                            CALL FOR PAPERS
                      Abstract Due March 31, 2003

    E-Government Cluster: of Minitracks (s-Gov-Management, e-Policy,
                e-Democracy, and e-Government Services)
    at the 37th Hawaiian International Conference on System Sciences
                               (HICSS37)
                          January 5 to 8, 2004
       Waikoloa Hitlton, The Big Island of HawaiiCall for Papers
            CALL FOR PAPERS (Please find detailed CfP under
             http://www2.ctg.albany.edu/conference/hicss/ )

E-Government Cluster of Minitracks

Government at all levels (federal, state, and local) and across all
branches (legislative, executive, and judicial) is the biggest single
investor in and user of Information Technology (IT). Given its
enormously varied missions, government employs a vast range of
information technology applications which have dramatically changed the
way government is conducted and will continue to affect the way citizens
and businesses expect government to function in the 21st century.
Government is also a powerful incubator, creator, influencer, precursor,
and director of information technology programs, initiatives, and
trends. The creation of the Internet and the National Science
Foundation's current multiyear Information Technology Research (ITR)
and Digital Government programs are examples of this kind of government
involvement in IT development. The close and complex relationship
between information technology and the public sector has become a major
focus of academic research in fields such as public administration,
organizational behavior, information science, and technology innovation.

The study field of E-Government is covered by four minitracks
(s-Gov-Management, e-Policy, e-Democracy, and e-Government Services),
which are intended to contribute to the increased understanding of this
complex and important topic and to promote improved research in these
fields of study. To promote these goals, the four minitracks complement
each other by establishing distinct focal points. Please read the
detailed CfP under http://www2.ctg.albany.edu/conference/hicss/


Important Deadlines

March 31, 200         Abstracts submitted for guidance and indication of
appropriate content
June 1, 2003            Full papers submitted to Minitrack Chairs

Contact minitrack chairs for submission instructions

August 31, 2003 Notice of accepted papers sent to Authors

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