GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Journal - Bridge of Knowledge

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GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY

ISSN:

0740-624X

eISSN:

1872-9517

Disciplines
(Field of Science):

  • Social communication and media studies (Social studies)
  • Political and administrative sciences (Social studies)
  • Management and quality studies (Social studies)
  • Law (Social studies)
  • International relations (Social studies)

Ministry points: Help

Ministry points - current year
Year Points List
Year 2024 200 Ministry scored journals list 2024
Ministry points - previous years
Year Points List
2024 200 Ministry scored journals list 2024
2023 200 Ministry Scored Journals List
2022 200 Ministry Scored Journals List 2019-2022
2021 200 Ministry Scored Journals List 2019-2022
2020 200 Ministry Scored Journals List 2019-2022
2019 200 Ministry Scored Journals List 2019-2022
2018 40 A
2017 40 A
2016 40 A
2015 40 A
2014 35 A
2013 35 A
2012 35 A
2011 35 A
2010 32 A

Model:

Hybrid

Points CiteScore:

Points CiteScore - current year
Year Points
Year 2022 17.3
Points CiteScore - previous years
Year Points
2022 17.3
2021 14.5
2020 11.6
2019 10.3
2018 10.3
2017 9.2
2016 8.7
2015 9.8
2014 6.2
2013 6.2
2012 5.9
2011 4.5

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total: 7

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Catalog Journals

  • A conceptual framework for digital tax administration - A systematic review
    Publication
    • E. Bassey
    • E. Mulligan
    • A. Ojo

    - GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Year 2022

    Tax administrations worldwide have become highly digitised with a diverse and sophisticated array of e-services to enhance the taxpayer experience. Nevertheless, given the high rates of failure of e-government services, it is critical to understand the factors that are essential to the success of a digital tax system. Drawing on a systematic review of ninety-six publications across the digital taxation, taxation, and information...

    Full text available to download

  • Design principles for creating digital transparency in government
    Publication

    - GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Year 2021

    Under pressure to fight corruption, hold public officials accountable, and build trust with citizens, many governments pursue the quest for greater transparency. They publish data about their internal operations, externalize decision-making processes, establish digital inquiry lines to public officials, and employ other forms of transparency using digital means. Despite the presence of many transparency-enhancing digital tools,...

    Full text available to download

  • Platform governance for sustainable development: Reshaping citizen-administration relationships in the digital age
    Publication

    - GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Year 2018

    Changing governance paradigms has been shaping and reshaping the landscape of citizen-administration relationships, from impartial application of rules and regulations by administration to exercise its authority over citizens (bureaucratic paradigm), through provision of public services by administration to fulfil the needs of citizens (consumerist paradigm), to responsibility-sharing between administration and citizens for policy...

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  • Implementing Sustainable Development Goals with Digital Government – Aspiration-capacity gap
    Publication

    Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) represent a commitment by all United Nations Member States to pursue development efforts, including ending poverty and hunger, promoting well-being and education, reducing inequalities, fostering peace, and protecting the planet. Member States and their governments are supposed to take ownership of the SDGs, strengthen the implementation means, and improve public governance as both the means...

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  • Universal and contextualized public services: Digital public service innovation framework
    Publication

    - GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Year 2016

    In view of the rising social and economic inequalities, public service delivery should be both universal, i.e. independent of the recipients' social or economic status, and contextualized, i.e. able to compensate for different local needs and conditions. Reconciling both properties requires various forms of innovations, chief among them innovations in digital public services. Building upon the four-stage model underpinning the...

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  • Data governance: Organizing data for trustworthy Artificial Intelligence
    Publication
    • M. Janssen
    • P. Brous
    • E. Estevez
    • L. S. Barbosa
    • T. Janowski

    - GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY - Year 2020

    The rise of Big, Open and Linked Data (BOLD) enables Big Data Algorithmic Systems (BDAS) which are often based on machine learning, neural networks and other forms of Artificial Intelligence (AI). As such systems are increasingly requested to make decisions that are consequential to individuals, communities and society at large, their failures cannot be tolerated, and they are subject to stringent regulatory and ethical requirements....

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  • Digital government evolution: From transformation to contextualization
    Publication

    The Digital Government landscape is continuously changing to reflect how governments are trying to find innovative digital solutions to social, economic, political and other pressures, and how they transform themselves in the process. Understanding and predicting such changes is important for policymakers, government executives, researchers and all those who prepare, make, implement or evaluate Digital Government decisions. This...

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