Title
Visual Culture and Electronic Government: Exploring a New Generation of E-Government
Abstract
E-government is becoming more picture-oriented. What meaning do stakeholders attach to visual events and visualization? Comparative case study research show the functional meaning primarily refers to registration, integration, transparency and communication. The political meaning refers to new ways of framing in order to secure specific interests and claims. To what the institutional meaning relates is ambiguous: either it improves the position of citizens, or it reinforces the existing bias presented by governments. Hence, we expect that the emergence of a visualized public space, through omnipresent penetration of (mobile) multimedia technologies, will influence government-citizen interactions.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.1007/978-3-642-03516-6_22
EGOV
Keywords
Field
DocType
multimedia technology,electronic government,institutional meaning,existing bias,government-citizen interaction,political meaning,functional meaning,specific interest,new generation,omnipresent penetration,comparative case study research,visual culture,new way,visualization,e government
Framing (construction),Transparency (graphic),Comparative case,Public space,Public relations,Visualization,Computer science,Knowledge management,Politics,Visual culture,Government
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
5693
0302-9743
4
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.55
3
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Victor Bekkers121116.97
Rebecca Moody2122.68