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CS5038 The Electronic Society Lecture 8: e-Government Lecture Outline Terminology - G2C, G2B, G2E Major areas of G2C activities Six stages to implementation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
CS5038 The Electronic Society
  • Lecture 8 e-Government
  • Lecture Outline
  • Terminology - G2C, G2B, G2E
  • Major areas of G2C activities
  • Six stages to implementation
  • Implementation Problems
  • Current state in UK
  • E-Government - Increasing Inequality?
  • Addressing the Democratic Deficit
  • eParticipation
  • eGovernment in the Developing World Sri Lanka
  • eGovernment in Singapore

2
E-Government
  • The use of electronic technology by a government
    to
  • Deliver its services better
  • Improve its efficiency and effectiveness (just
    like eCommerce)
  • Less staff needed to serve people quicker/cheaper
  • Make governments more transparent to citizens and
    businesses
  • Access to more of the information generated by
    government
  • Government to citizens (G2C)
  • Delivery of public services etc. (next slide)
  • Government-to-employees (G2E)
  • Activities and services between government units
    and their employees
  • Government to Government (G2G)
  • Intragovernmental activities
  • Within a Government department and between
    Government bodies

3
E-Government
  • Government to business (G2B)
  • E-Procurement reverse auctions for MROs
  • Group purchasing
  • eFAST service (gsa.gov) conducts reverse auctions
    for aggregated orders
  • E-Auctions
  • government surpluses
  • real estate
  • seized goods
  • Tax collection and management
  • electronic filing of taxes is now available in
    over 100 countries

4
E-Government
  • Major areas of G2C activities http//www.direct.g
    ov.uk/Homepage/fs/en
  • tourism and recreation
  • research and education
  • downloadable forms
  • discovery of government services
  • information about public policy
  • advice about health and safety issues
  • Pay tax bills, receive documents and payments
  • Nationwide Electronic benefit transfer (EBT)
    system in U.S. to deliver government benefits
    electronically
  • deliver benefits to recipients bank accounts
  • smart card system for those without bank accounts
  • Makes government more transparent to citizens -
    access to information
  • Greater opportunities to participate in
    democratic institutions
  • Future voting
  • Useful in solving constituents problems
  • Track problems using CRM-type software

5
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6
E-Government Stages
  • Six stages to implementation (most governments
    are at stage 1)
  • Information publishing/dissemination services
    available, contact details
  • Two-way transactions - Submit personal
    information, monetary transactions
  • Multipurpose portals in Australia
    www.sa.gov.au
  • Portal personalisation must allow interfaces
    to be manipulated by user
  • Clustering of common services people see
    clusters of services rather than agencies
    reorganisation of government structure
  • Full integration and enterprise transformation
    full service centre personalised to customer

7
E-Government
  • Implementation issues
  • Transformation speed - usually slow
  • Resistance by employees
  • Limited budget
  • Legal environment
  • G2B implementation
  • Easier than G2C
  • Can be outsourced (Hong Kong)
  • Security and privacy issues
  • Citizens data
  • Especially healthcare
  • Wireless applications
  • E.g. wireless tourist service (Bergen)

8
E-Government in UK
  • Implementation issues
  • Has reached the stage of two-way transactions
    with many sites
  • Fast uptake of broadband in UK, but sparse use of
    online eGovernment services by citizens
  • Few government employees have completed their
    first ECDL module
  • 800 Government bodies spawned 3000 sites (2003)
  • Need for sites offering related services in one
    place
  • Each distinct site needs to be clear and focused
  • E.g. housing, transport, education, immigration
  • Public will learn to associate that site with its
    particular services
  • Fragmented view of a citizen
  • Many different departments hold records
  • Often Different formats
  • Implementation of cross agency infrastructure
    lacking

9
E-Government - Increasing Inequality?
  • Digital divide within UK
  • The haves Broadband access from the home
  • The have-nots no Internet access
  • Except in Public libraries perhaps
  • May lack skills/education to use it effectively
  • The elderly may lack skills, and may not trust
    faceless interaction
  • Those on the wrong side of the digital divide may
    be even more excluded from participation in
    democracy
  • Important information on candidates at election
    time
  • Submission to ePetitions for lobbying
    parliament
  • Solutions?
  • Brazil offering half a million computers to
    citizens at low prices
  • Credit schemes to assist citizens to buy

10
Addressing the Democratic Deficit
  • Voter turnout has dropped

11
Addressing the Democratic Deficit(Many facts
from essay by Robert Glasgow)
  • Voter turnout has dropped
  • in the United States
  • 70 of eligible population register to vote
  • 50 vote in presidential elections
  • Western Europe average 77 turnout
  • UK 60
  • Especially low among young, unemployed, ethnic
    minorities
  • Latin America 54
  • Decline almost wholly concentrated among young
    people
  • Membership in political parties
  • 1950s 3.5M
  • 2000s 0.5M
  • Public Trust in
  • Politicians 18
  • Doctors 91

12
Addressing the Democratic Deficit
  • Participation in new social movements has
    increased
  • Campaign groups
  • 1M demonstrated against Iraq war
  • NGOs (e.g. Amnesty International)
  • Increasingly on the Internet
  • People disillusioned with traditional political
    system?

13
Electronic Participation
  • eRevolution?
  • Top down benefits Potential to make citizens
  • More informed
  • Streaming footage of debates
  • Political information
  • More engaged
  • Webchats with elected representatives
  • Online Voting (Estonia and Switzerland)
  • More trusting
  • Bottom up benefits Potential for citizens to
  • Contribute to policy making
  • Online Questionnaires
  • Discussion Forums
  • Propose policies themselves
  • Hold politicians to account
  • Reach to young people
  • 30 of 15-24yr olds have engaged in online
    political activity (10 offline)

14
Electronic Participation
  • Criticisms
  • Unrealistic
  • Ignores existing political process
  • De-legitimises existing institutions
  • Power devolved from elected representatives and
    placed in hands of administrative side
  • Politicians may be unable to fulfil campaign
    promises
  • Ignores problems in web technologies
  • Easy to set up forum
  • Hard to analyse and collate results unrealistic
    software
  • Too open to deception/malicious use
  • Some politicians view public participation as a
    threat

15
Electronic Participation
  • Big Conversation - http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk
    _politics/3245620.stm
  • 77-page document setting out challenges faced by
    Britain
  • Website gives people a chance to air their views
    on policies
  • Issues
  • Ban workplace smoking?
  • Should rowdy city centre pubs contribute towards
    policing?
  • Funding in further education and UK
  • How important is the euro to locking in
    macroeconomic stability?
  • Criticisms
  • Merely a publicity stunt
  • Danger of pressure groups hijacking exercise

16
Electronic Participation
  • Big Conversation
  • - Guardian Article http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk
    _politics/3245620.stm
  • For the duration of its life, the Big
    Conversation website carried not a single comment
    from a single voter on
  • Iraq
  • Terrorism
  • Blair's relationship with Bush
  • Working on this newspaper's Diary column at the
    time, I was contacted almost daily by people who
    had attempted to address one of the above issues
    in either an email or text message (price 25p),
    but whose comments mysteriously never
    materialised on the site
  • As for those that made it through
  • "I am so proud to have voted Labour with my first
    ever vote a few years ago," read one comment.
    "Everywhere I look I see new cars, wealth,
    opportunities, investment and most favourable
    mortgage rates."

17
eGovernment in the Developing World
  • "About 99 of the benefits of having a PC come
    when you've provided reasonable health and
    literacy to the person who's going to sit down
    and use it".
  • Bill Gates, Chairman of Microsoft

18
eGovernment in the Developing World
19
eGovernment in the Developing World
20
eGovernment in the Developing World
  • Case study in Sri Lanka (by Geeth de Mel)
  • ICT Programme established in 2002
  • Aims
  • Improved delivery off social services
  • Let people access information efficiently
  • Improve inter organisation communication
  • Reducing the vulnerabilities to natural disasters
  • Example of existing problems
  • Tsunami of 2004 still no accurate figures on
    affected people
  • No mechanisms to support aid organisations in
    immediate aftermath
  • Greater transparency
  • Reduce corruption
  • Increased social participation
  • Empowerment off poor
  • Further socio-economic development

21
eGovernment in the Developing World
  • Case study in Sri Lanka (by Geeth de Mel)
  • Example Failure/Success
  • Ministry of Education went online with exam
    results
  • System poorly planned and crashed
  • Took department longer than old manual system
  • Success story from same department in 2004
  • Introduced new ICT curriculum
  • Success due to Internettelevisionradio (more
    accessible)

22
eGovernment in the Developing World
  • Case study in Sri Lanka (by Geeth de Mel)
  • Difficulties
  • Lack cash flow encourage assistance of 3rd
    parties
  • Vested Interest by 3rd parties can change project
    goals
  • Corruption by high ranking officials
  • Schools starting to get computer labs
  • But not all villages have electricity
  • IT literacy
  • City 35
  • Rural lt10
  • Computer ownership
  • Urban 10
  • Rural 3
  • Estate 0.3

23
eGovernment in Singapore
  • http//www.ecitizen.gov.sg/
  • eCitizen can
  • do passport application
  • register as resident
  • find jobs in government
  • pay road tax
  • donate to Charities
  • Governments role changes from manager to service
    provider
  • Citizens become like customers
  • Dangers
  • Dependence on technology also brings
    vulnerability
  • Hackers/terrorists
  • easier than physical attacks on government
  • privacy

24
eGovernment Summary
  • Terminology - G2C, G2B, G2E
  • Major areas of G2C activities
  • Six stages to implementation
  • Implementation Problems
  • Current state in UK
  • E-Government - Increasing Inequality?
  • Addressing the Democratic Deficit
  • eParticipation
  • eGovernment in the Developing World Sri Lanka
  • eGovernment in Singapore
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