Enlisting on-line residents : expanding the boundaries of e-government in a Japanese rural township
By: THOMPSON,Christopher S
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Material type: ![materialTypeLabel](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/AR.png)
Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
The purpose of this article is to analyze and learn from an unusual way in which local bureaucrats in a Japanese rural township are using the Internet to serve their constituents by enlisting the support of "on-line residents". Successfull e-government requires not only rethinking the potential uses of computer technology, but in adopting new patterns of decision-making, power sharing, and office management that many bureaucrats may not be predisposed to make. The main thesis of this article is that necessity and practicality can play a powerful motivational role in facilitating the incorporation of information technology (IT) at the leve of local government. This case study of how bureaucrats in Twa-ch, a small, agricultural town in Northeastern Japan, have harnessed the Internet demonstrates clearly the fundamentals of building a successfull e-government framework in this rural municipality, similar to may communities in Europe and North America today
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