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<DIV dir=ltr align=left>[Please accept our apologies for multiple
postings!]<BR><BR><SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold">IFIP e-government conference
(EGOV) 2010</SPAN><BR>29 August – 2 September 2010; Lausanne,
Switzerland<BR>(co-organised with ePart
2010)<BR>www.egov-conference.org<BR> <BR><SPAN
style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Call for Papers</SPAN><BR><BR>The Europe-based Annual
International IFIP e-government conference is one of three core conferences,
which present the state of the art in the study domains of eGovernment and
eGovernance. Over the years, through the organisation of its Europe-based
conferences, the EGOV community has provided important guidance for research and
development in this fast-moving domain of study. The different conferences
thereby play an important role. This time for the first time, the conference
will be a full IFIP working conference organised by the IFIP working group 8.5
(pending IFIP approval).<BR><BR>The IFIP e-government conference b rings
together leading researchers and professionals from across the globe and from a
number of disciplines. Over the years, the interest in this domain of study has
steadily increased. The 2009 EGOV conference - within the DEXA conference
cluster - has attracted more than 130 participants from 32 countries including
developing countries, with 35 contributions in completed research, 25
contributions in ongoing research, 7 projects contributions and 3
workshops.<BR>eGovernment research has demonstrated its relevance to practice
and consequently has influenced and even shaped government strategies and
implementations. Conversely, eGovernment practice has inspired eGovernment
research. A wide range of topics has received scholarly attention. In recent
years, the assessment and evaluation of eGovernment projects, the foundations of
eGovernment as a research discipline, integration and interoperation in
government, and the role of information and communication technology for
developme nt rank among leading topics on the research agenda.<BR><BR>Topics at
the IFIP e-government conference 2010 include but are not limited
to:<BR><BR> * Foundations of eGovernment and eGovernance
research<BR> * Future directions in research and practice of
ICT in the public sector<BR> * Research theories and
frameworks for public sector modernization with the support of
ICT<BR> * Research methods, method integration and
techniques<BR> * Designing and assessing systems for the
public sector: innovative cases and systems<BR> * ICT usage,
acceptance and performance of technology-supported public sector activities:
methods and contemporary case analyses<BR> * Innovation
management, change management and complexity management in shaping public sector
advancements<BR> * Benefits management in the context of
eGovernment<BR> * Mass collaboration of stakeholders in
government modernization: participative governance and policy
modelling<BR> * Stakeholder-driven public sector
reengineering<BR> * Mobile services and methods in
government<BR> * Cloud computing and social networks in the
public sector<BR> * Information preservation, information
management, and information access<BR> * Trust and privacy in
eGovernment<BR> * Open source in
eGovernment<BR> * Emergency and disaster response
management<BR> * Retaining public sector
experiences<BR> * Education, training courses, and
curricula<BR><BR>The IFIP e-government conference 2010 hosts four distinct
formats of contributions:<BR><BR> * Completed research papers
(max 12 pages, published in Springer)<BR> * Ongoing research
and innovative projects (max 8 pages, published in
Trauner)<BR> * Workshops and panels on pertinent
issues<BR> * PhD colloquium submission.<BR><BR>These formats
encourage scientific rigor and discussions of state of the art in the study
domain, but also welcome innovative research approaches, work in progress, and
studies of practical eGovernment or eGovernance projects, as well as reports on
systems implementation. Prior to the conference (August 29 and 30) a PhD student
colloquium will be held providing doctoral students with an international forum
for presenting their work, networking opportunities and cross-disciplinary
inspiration. <BR>We seek innovative and scholarly sound contributions. Accepted
papers of completed research will be published in Springer. Ongoing research and
project papers will be published in Trauner proceedings. Read more in the
submission guidelines and review criteria<BR><BR>The IFI P e-government
conference will be co-located with ePart, the new International Conference
on eParticipation, which will be dedicated to topics on eParticipation and
eDemocracy. ePart will take place in parallel to the IFIP e-government
conference at the same venue.<BR><BR><SPAN style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Important
Dates</SPAN><BR>Submission of papers: 15 February 2010<BR>Submission of
workshop/panel proposals: 15 March 2010<BR>Submissions to PhD
colloquium: 15 March 2010<BR>Notification of acceptance for papers:
30 March 2010<BR>Notification of acceptance for workshops/panels: 30 April
2010<BR> <BR><SPAN style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Conference
chairs:</SPAN><BR>Maria A. Wimmer, University of Koblenz-Landau,
Germany<BR>Jochen Scholl, University of Washington, USA<BR>Marijn Janssen, Delft
University of Technology, Netherlands<BR>Jean-Loup Chappelet, IDHEAP, University
of Lausanne, Switzerland<BR><BR><SPAN style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Honorary
chair</SPAN><BR>Roland Traunmüller, University of Linz, Austria<BR><BR><SPAN
style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Chairs of PhD Colloquium</SPAN><BR>Sharon Dawes,
Center for Technology in Government, USA<BR>Björn Niehaves, European Research
Center for Information Systems, Germany<BR><BR><SPAN
style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Program committee</SPAN><BR>Ashraf Hassan Abdelwahab,
Deputy to the Minister of State for Administrative Development, Egypt<BR>Suha
AlAwadhi, College of Social Sciences, Kuwait University, Kuwait<BR>Shadi
Al-Khamayseh, Computer Systems Dept / Faculty of Information Technology,
University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), Australia<BR>Vincenzo Ambriola,
University of Pisa, Italy<BR>Kim Norman Andersen, Copenhagen Business School,
Denmark<BR>Rex Arendsen, University of Twente, Netherlands<BR>Yigal Arens,
Digital Government Research Center, University of Southern
CaliforniaUSA<BR>Karin Axelsson, Linköping University and örebro University,
Sweden<BR>Molnar Balint, Corvinus University, Hungary<BR>Frank Bannister,
Trinity College Dublin, Ireland<BR>Victor Bekkers, Erasmus University Rotterdam,
The Netherlands<BR>Lasse Berntzen, Vestfold University College, Norway<BR>John
Bertot, University of Maryland, College Park, USA<BR>Dana Boldeanu, Bucharest
Academy of Economic Studies and University Politehnica of Bucharest,
Romania<BR>Bojan Cestnik, Temida d.o.o., Slovenia<BR>Yannis Charalabidis,
National Technical University of Athens, Greece<BR>Serge Chernyshenko,
Khmelnitsky National University, Ukraine<BR>Wichian Chutimaskul, King Mongkut's
University of Technology Thonburi, Thailand<BR>Jean-Loup Chappelet, IDHEAP,
Switzerland<BR>Flavio Corradini, University of Camerino, Italy<BR>Ahmed M.
Darwish, Minister of State for Administrative Development, Egypt<BR>Jim Davies,
University of Oxford, UK<BR>Sharon Dawes, Center for Technology in Government,
USA<BR>Rahul De', Indian Institute of Management Bangalore, India<BR>Marco de
Marco, Catholic University of Milan, Italy<BR>Elsa Estevez,UN University Macao,
China<BR>Enrico Ferro, Istituto Superiore Mario Boella (ISMB), Italy<BR>Leif S.
Flak, University of Agder, Norway<BR>Iván Futó, Corvinus University of Budapest,
Hungary<BR>Andras Gabor, Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public
Administration, Hungary<BR>Rimantas Gatautis, Kaunas University of Technology,
Lithuania<BR>J. Ramón Gil-García, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
(CIDE), Mexico<BR>Olivier Glassey, IDHEAP, Switzerland<BR>Dimitris Gouscos,
Department of Communication and Media Studies, University of Athens,
Greece<BR>Ake Grönlund, örebro University, Sweden<BR>Luis Guijarro-Coloma,
Technical University of Valencia, Spain<BR>M.P. Gupta, Department of Management
Studies & Indian Institute of Technolog y Delhi, India<BR>Helle Zinner
Henriksen, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark<BR>Jan Pries Heje, Roskilde
University, Denmark<BR>Zahir Irani, Brunel University, UK<BR>Tomasz Janowski,
United Nations University - IIST, Macau, China<BR>Arild Jansen, University of
Oslo, Norway<BR>Marijn Janssen, Delft University of Technology, The
Netherlands<BR>Luiz Antonio Joia, Brazilian School of Public and Business
Administration, Getulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil<BR>Ralf Klischewski, German
University in Cairo, Egypt<BR>Trond Knudsen, Research Council, Norway<BR>Herbert
Kubicek University of Bremen, Germany<BR>Christine Leitner, Danube University
Krems, Austria<BR>Katarina Lindblad-Gidlund, Mid Sweden University,
Sweden<BR>Miriam Lips, Victoria University of Wellington, New
Zealand<BR>Euripides Loukis, University of the Aegean, Greece<BR>Ann Macintosh,
Leeds University, UK<BR>Alexander Makarenko, Institute for Applied System
Analysis at National Technical Univ ersity of Ukraine (KPI), Ukraine<BR>Josef
Makolm, Federal Ministry of Finance, Austria<BR>Gregoris Mentzas, National
Technical University of Athens, Greece<BR>Jeremy Millard, Danish Technological
Institute, Denmark<BR>Carl Erik Moe, University of Agder, Norway<BR>Hernan
Moreno, CEPAL, Columbia<BR>José María Moreno Jimenez, University of Zaragossa,
Spain<BR>Scott Moss, SMA, UK<BR>Björn Niehaves, European Research Center for
Information Systems, Germany<BR>Peter Axel Nielsen, Aalborg University,
Denmark<BR>Arvo Ott, eGovernance Academy, Estonia<BR>Monica Palmirani, Alma
Mater Studiorum Universitŕ di Bologna C.I.R.S.F.I.D., Italy<BR>Theresa Pardo,
Center for Technology in Government, USA<BR>Vassilios Peristeras, DERI,
Ireland<BR>Rimantas Petrauskas, Law University of Lithuania, Lithuania<BR>Florin
Pop, Centre for Advanced Studies on Electronic Services, University Politehnica
of Bucharest, Romania<BR>Reinhard Posch, Technical University of Graz, CIO of
the Federal Government, Austria<BR>Andreja Pucihar, University of Maribor,
Slovenia<BR>Peter Reichstädter, Federal Chancellery, Austria<BR>Nicolau
Reinhard, University of Săo Paulo, Brazil<BR>Reinhard Riedl, Bern University of
Applied Sciences, Switzerland<BR>Tomas Sabol, Technical University of Kosice,
Slovakia<BR>řystein Sćbř, University of Agder, Norway<BR>Hans Jochen Scholl,
University of Washington, USA<BR>Jamal Shahin, Institute for European Studies,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium<BR>Mauricio Solar, U. Tecnica Federico Santa
Maria, Chile<BR>Maddalena Sorrentino, University of Milan, Italy<BR>Witold
Staniszkis, Rodan Systems S.A., Poland<BR>Ivar Tallo, United Nations Institute
for Training and Research, Switzerland<BR>Efthimios Tambouris, University of
Macedonia and CERTH/ITI, Greece<BR>Yao-Hua Tan, Delft University of Technology,
The Netherlands<BR>John Taylor, Glasgow Universi ty, UK<BR>A Min Tjoa, Technical
University of Vienna, Austria<BR>Roland Traunmüller, University of Linz,
Austria<BR>Tom van Engers, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands<BR>Mirko
Vintar, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia<BR>Vishanth Weerakkody, Brunel
University, UK<BR>Maria A. Wimmer, University of Koblenz-Landau,
Germany<BR>Petra Wolf, Technical University of Munich, Germany<BR>Chien-Chih Yu,
National ChengChi University, Taiwan
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