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Information Polity, Volume 27
Volume 27, Number 1, 2022
- The academic and societal value of research. 1-2
- Jon Aaen, Jeppe Agger Nielsen:
Lost in the diffusion chasm: Lessons learned from a failed robot project in the public sector. 3-20 - Fredric Skargren, Karin Garcia Ambrosiani:
The practitioners guide to a digital index: Unearthing design-principles of an abstract artefact. 21-41 - Sarah Hendrica Bickerton, Karl Löfgren:
Producing deflective online strategies: Lessons from New Zealand women's management of social media engagement. 43-58 - Suparna Soni, Austin M. Mitchell:
Women and digital government in rural India: Extending TAM with user assisted service. 59-78 - Esther Pano, Jaume Magre, Llorenç Pons, Sara Casajuana:
Institutional transparency and gender: Analysing the municipalities of the Barcelona Metropolitan Area. 79-95 - Nilay Yavuz:
Gender differences in perception and usage of public transit technologies: Implications for digital government. 97-113 - Kasny Damas:
McGuinness, T. D., & Schank, H. (2021). Power to the Public: The Promise of Public Interest Technology. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 115-118
Volume 27, Number 2, 2022
- Predatory journals and the use and abuse of special issues. 119-120
- Johann Cas, Paul de Hert, Maria Grazia Porcedda, Charles D. Raab:
Introduction to the Special Issue: Questioning Modern Surveillance Technologies: Ethical and Legal Challenges of Emerging Information and Communication Technologies. 121-129 - Elisa Orrù:
The European PNR Directive as an instance of pre-emptive, risk-based algorithmic security and its implications for the regulatory framework. 131-146 - Irena Barkane:
Questioning the EU proposal for an Artificial Intelligence Act: The need for prohibitions and a stricter approach to biometric surveillance. 147-162 - Thomas Gremsl, Elisabeth Hödl:
Emotional AI: Legal and ethical challenges. 163-174 - Roger Clarke:
Responsible application of artificial intelligence to surveillance: What prospects? 175-191 - Paul de Hert, Georgios Bouchagiar:
Visual and biometric surveillance in the EU. Saying 'no' to mass surveillance practices? 193-217 - Marie Eneman, Jan Ljungberg, Elena Raviola, Bertil Rolandsson:
The sensitive nature of facial recognition: Tensions between the Swedish police and regulatory authorities. 219-232 - Lachlan Urquhart, Diana Miranda, Lena Podoletz:
Policing the smart home: The internet of things as 'invisible witnesses'. 233-246 - Silvana Pedrozo, Francisco Klauser:
Between formality and informality: A critical study of the integration of drones within the Neuchâtel police force. 247-258 - David Eliot, David Murakami Wood:
Culling the FLoC: Market forces, regulatory regimes and Google's (mis)steps on the path away from targeted advertising. 259-274 - Catharina Rudschies:
Power in the modern 'surveillance society': From theory to methodology. 275-289 - Gary T. Marx:
An essay on complex problems and simple solutions: Techno-fallacies of the information age. 291-304 - Book Review. 305-308
Volume 27, Number 3, 2022
- Editorial: Are they now finally listening to us? 309-310
- More Ickson Manda:
Power, politics, and the institutionalisation of information systems for promoting digital transformation in the public sector: A case of the South African's government digital transformation journey. 311-329 - Sara Nyhlén, Katarina Lindblad-Gidlund:
In conversation with digitalization: Myths, fiction or professional imagining? 331-341 - Osiris S. González-Galván:
Understanding government discourses on social media: Lessons from the use of YouTube at local level. 343-356 - Pawel Baranowski:
Leaning toward social media-based campaigning? Political communication online in Poland during the 2018 regional elections. 357-371 - Iréne Bernhard, Elin Wihlborg:
Bringing all clients into the system - Professional digital discretion to enhance inclusion when services are automated. 373-389 - Thomas Denk, Karin Hedström, Fredrik Karlsson:
Citizens' attitudes towards automated decision-making. 391-408 - Elizabeth Denham:
Citizens first: A data regulator's perspective on surveillance in three cases1. 409-416 - Erratum to papers published in Information Polity - Volume 27, issue 2. 417-418
- Erratum to: Between formality and informality: A critical study of the integration of drones within the Neuchâtel police force. 419
Volume 27, Number 4, 2022
- Editorial: The Grand Challenges for Academic Journals. 421-423
- Erna H. J. M. Ruijer, Suzanne Piotrowski:
Introduction to the special issue on Inclusion and E-Government: Progress and Questions for Scholars of Social Equity. 425-432 - Bijan Azad, Fouad Zablith:
An emergent mechanism of inclusive e-Government design: The interplay of user design input and provider response. 433-453 - Anca Monica Marin:
Development of e-government in the field of social services and benefits: Evidence from Romania. 455-471 - Luigi Reggi, Sharon S. Dawes, J. Ramón Gil-García:
The effects of open government data on the inclusiveness of governance networks: Identifying management strategies and success factors. 473-490 - Kayla Schwoerer:
Whose open data is it anyway? An exploratory study of open government data relevance and implications for democratic inclusion. 491-515 - Bokyong Shin, Mikko Rask, Pekka Tuominen:
Learning through online participation: A longitudinal analysis of participatory budgeting using Big Data indicators. 517-538 - Sumanjeet Singh, Vimal Kumar, Minakshi Paliwal, Pratima Verma, Binod Rajak:
A citizen-centric approach to understand the effectiveness of e-government web portals: Empirical evidence from India. 539-555 - Douglas Kimemia:
Country report: Kenya county governments' websites analysis report. 557-566 - Jennifer Campbell-Meier:
Foundations of information literacy, Taylor, Natalie Greene, and Paul T. Jaeger. ALA Neal-Schuman, 2022. 567-569 - List of contributing reviewers 2022. 571-572
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