Author
Abstract

During the past few decades, many governments around the globe have orchestrated e-government projects in order to improve the way they operate and provide public services to citizens. Apart from the opportunities they open up, e-government projects
bring about changes in the well-established practices of the public sector. This paper illustrates some of these changes by
exploring a Greek e-government initiative. As the case illustrates, e-government requires an output orientation and business-like
behavior from officials, enables constant electronic control, and leads to the standardization of official’s knowledge. Drawing
upon these changes, we propose a framework of the transformations that e-government brings about in the work roles, nature
of work, forms of knowledge, modes of control, and source of accountability of officials.

Year of Publication
2008
Secondary Title
Information Technology in the Service Economy: Challenges and Possibilities for the 21st Century
Date Published
2008
Citation Key
763
URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-09768-8_15
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