Decolonization of e-government research and practice:

AOSIS Scholarly Books

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Decolonization of e-government research and practice:
 
Creator Bwalya, Kelvin J; University of Johannesburg, South Africa
 
Subject applications business cloud computing context data developing countries e-Government ICT infrastructure research technology JP
Description With the rapid increase in the implementation of e-government in Africa and worldwide, the need to investigate the key bottlenecks (issues) caused by the failure of many e-government projects cannot be ignored. The main purpose of this book is to contribute to the current scholarly and intellectual discourse on different aspects of e-government, such as understanding the critical issues in design, implementation and monitoring. This book specifically intends to bring out contextual issues that hugely impact the probability of e-government failure or success. It also differentiates itself by carefully exploring the issue of context-awareness (informed by the local context) for e-government design and implementation, which has not been pursued in any publication in e-government before, although it has been used in other information computational contexts. Therefore, the many theses within this book are concerned with e-government design approaches, implementation policies and requirements, and monitoring dimensions that need to be informed by the contextual characteristics in which they are implemented.
This book contributes to the body of knowledge by presenting an in-depth analysis of a case of e-government implementation. Therefore, this book has facts backed by intermittent references to an empirical study done in Zambia to accentuate issues in the design, adoption, usage, and monitoring of e-government projects. The case articulates the methodological issues in the design and measurement of e-government. The use of a combination of structural equation modelling (SEM), exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and advanced techniques such as principal component analysis (PCA) in investigating different aspects of e-government in a developing country context has not been done in any previous research. The novel methodological nuances articulated in this book can go a long way toward understanding the factors explaining the successful implementation of e-government. Previous publications have used basic statistical approaches devoid of adequate scientific or statistical rigour, such as descriptive statistics, to arrive at factors influencing the success or failure of e-government.
Furthermore, this book contributes to the body of knowledge by emphasising the different dimensions and issues of the multidimensional perspectives of e-government. The book explores tangible pointers for the design and implementation of e-government, giving it the thrust to potentially guide the actual implementation of e-government in African setups.
 
Publisher AOSIS Scholarly Books
 
Date 2019-01-28
 
Type Book
Format Hardback (BB)
Identifier 978-1-928396-75-8
 
Source AOSIS Scholarly Books;
 
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