-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [AISWorld] CFC - Democratic Strategies and Citizen-Centered E-Government Services Datum: Sat, 21 Sep 2013 06:57:34 +0200 Von: Ejub Kajan ejubkajan@sbb.rs Antwort an: kajane@acm.org Organisation: State University of Novi Pazar An: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org Kopie (CC): ekajan@ieee.org
CALL FOR CHAPTER PROPOSALS Proposal Submission Deadline: October 15, 2013 Democratic Strategies and Citizen-Centered E-Government Services A book edited by Dr. Ćemal Dolićanin (State University of Novi Pazar, Serbia) Dr. Ejub Kajan (State University of Novi Pazar, Serbia) Dr. Dragan Randjelović (Academy for Criminalistic and Police Studies, Belgrade, Serbia) Dr. Boban Stojanović (University of Nis, Serbia)
To be published by IGI Global: http://www.igi-global.com/publish/call-for-papers/call-details/1043
Introduction E-Government is rapidly changing the way governmental services are provided to citizens and businesses, over the last years. The increasing number of data, regulations, policies and their updates is resulting by a huge number of semi-structured heterogeneous documents including semantic and multilingual problems, etc. On the other hand, globalization, migration, financial crisis, climate changes and other natural hazards that may happen either locally or across the globe are putting new challenges to e-government, e.g. how to provide accurate information to citizens with respect to their constitutional laws and to businesses with respect to desired economic growth.
Aside from the financial costs and threats to the success of E-government are challenges that have often been overlooked or ignored. E.g. governments have not employed many democratic strategies in tailoring e-government services to match citizen’s and/or business requirements. Additionally, different or even the same levels of governments are suffering by too much heterogeneity of data and standards in use.
The objective of this book is to address which services in e-government should be provided to users and how: i.e. dealing with existing data, new data acquisition, even in real time, and intelligent data bringing to either citizens or to business in an accurate, timely and secure manner. At the same time the interoperability within an e-government, in B2G and B2C domain should be at the highest possible level. To achieve these goals the effective usage of advanced Web technologies such as crowdsourcing, data mashup, ontologies, Web services, Internet of Things and their power effective combination should be analyze, develop and deploy in e-government services. Despite the common interoperability goals above in depth analysis of specific domain requirements should also be taken into account.
New approaches, including thinking about new possibilities for the Internet of Things and the Internet of Services and for “cloud oriented” approaches is also of real interest to researchers who hope to solve these problems. E-Government applications play a part in the evolution of future technologies, promise a new way to share and discover information, and may improve business and government exchange capability. Moving toward real business intelligence, many researchers hope to discover where intelligent agents and Semantic Web technologies fit in now and how they support the goal of improving Electronic government services at the highest possible level.
Objective of the Book The book will give an overview of the latest achievements in the field, provide in-depth analysis of and research on the development and deployment of cutting-edge applications, and provide insight into future trends.
Target Audience The subject of the book is one of the hot topics in electronic government, electronic business and IT research. The target audience of this book will be composed of researchers, teachers, advanced undergraduates, and PhD students in various e-business and computer science programs.
Recommended topics include, but are not limited to, the following: Methods, theories and algorithms for decision making Mathematical foundation for decision making Multiple-criteria decision making Algorithms for decision making
E-Government documents Data structures exchanged, data-semantics, multilingual challenges Data normalization Data clustering Interoperability issues of government data exchange XMLschema matching of e-government documents inside and with e-business systems Web services for e-government documents Mediation of e-government documents Semantic definitions of e-government documents and product Ontology-based development, representation and alignment
E-Business Processes in E-Government Business Process Modeling (Concepts and Tools) Business Process Orchestration, Choreography and Collaboration Semantically-Enabled Business Processes Artifact-based Business Processes Business Process Ontology Towards Reference Ontology for Business Processes
Advanced Internet technologies and their impact on E-Government Web 2.0 for E-Government services Approaches to the publication of services Approaches to the publication of “things” Earlier adoptions Semantic definitions of services Early standards efforts on IoT and IoS Theory, practice and vision of agent’s deployment in electronic government
Security and trust in E-Government Main issues and challenges for security and trust in E-Government The fight against cyber-crime: methods, tools and applications
Standardization development, dissemination, relevance, quality and costs in e-Government Types, roles and relevance of standardization bodies Organization and standardization of the development process Relations between standards Quality metrics for standards Economic aspects of using standards
Domains, concepts and experiences (projects, results, methods, organization, lessons learned) citizen services G2B services e-health Disaster management Lessons learned and To Dos
Submission Procedure Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit on or before October 15, 2013, a 2-3 page chapter proposal clearly explaining the mission and concerns of his or her proposed chapter. Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by October 30, 2013 about the status of their proposals and sent chapter guidelines. Full chapters are expected to be submitted by January, 30, 2014. All submitted chapters will be reviewed on a double-blind review basis. Contributors may also be requested to serve as reviewers for this project.
Publisher This book is scheduled to be published by IGI Global (formerly Idea Group Inc.), publisher of the “Information Science Reference” (formerly Idea Group Reference), “Medical Information Science Reference,” “Business Science Reference,” and “Engineering Science Reference” imprints. For additional information regarding the publisher, please visit www.igi-global.com. This publication is anticipated to be released in 2014.
Important Dates October, 15, 2013: Proposal Submission Deadline November 1, 2013: Notification of Acceptance January 30, 2014: Full Chapter Submission March 30, 2014: Review Results Returned April 30, 2014: Revised Chapter Submission May 15, 2014: Final Acceptance Notification May 30, 2014: Submission of Final Chapters
Editorial Advisory Board Members Dr. Alberto Asquer, University of London, UK Dr. Yannis Charalabidis, University of the Aegean, Greece Dr. Slobodanka Djordjevic-Kajan, University of Nis, Serbia Dr. Jingshan Huang, University of South Alabama, USA Dr. Marijn Janssen, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands Dr. In Lee, Western Illinois University, USA Dr. Alfred Loo, Lingan University Hong Kong, China Dr. Ma Antonia Martinez-Carreras, University of Murcia, Spain Dr. Inty Sáez Mosquera, Universiity Central "Marta Abreu" de Las Villas, Cuba Dr. Thurasamy Ramayah, University Sains Malaysia, Malaysia Dr. Goran Shimic, Military Academy Belgrade, Serbia Dr. Jelena Stankovic, University of Niš, Serbia Dr. Milija Suknovic, University of Belgrade, Serbia Dr. Zhaohao Sun, University of Ballarat, Australia
Inquiries and submissions can be forwarded electronically (Word document) to: Dr. Ejub Kajan E-mail: kajane@acm.org