Conference Chair: Frank Bannister
Programme Chairs: Alan Mullally and Dr Dan Remenyi
CALL FOR PAPERS
The European Conference on E-Government (ECEG) is an opportunity for academics, practitioners and consultants from Europe and elsewhere who are involved in the study, management, development and implementation of web enabled and ITC initiatives in the Government sector to come together and exchange ideas. The advisory group for the conference invites submissions of papers on both the theory and practice of all aspects of web enabling technology in the public sector. The conference in September 2001 is seeking qualitative, experience-based and quantitative papers as well as case studies and reports of work in progress from academics and government departments. Topics may include, but are not limited to, e-Government portals, e-Government transaction sites, webocracy, security and confidentiality, integrated systems, citizen centric information systems, web enabled knowledge management and other ITC enabled systems in the public service sector.
Submission details:
Abstract details: No more than 500 words
to be received by 31 May 2001.
File type:
Word for Windows.
Submission:
By Email attachment to: dan.remenyi@tcd.ie
Full paper:
Only required on acceptence of abstract and not to be more than 5,000 words.
Submission date will
be no later than 31 July 2001.
All abstracts received by the submission deadline will be considered for presentation at the Conference. Papers accepted will be published in the conference proceedings only providing authors present their work at the Conference.
Important dates:
Abstract submission deadline: 31 May
2001
Notification of acceptance:
30 June 2001
Final copy of full paper due:
31 July 2001
Conference Executive:
Frank Bannister, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, frank.bannister@tcd.ie
Professor Egon Berghout, Technical University of Delft, Netherlands,
e.w.berghout@twi.tudelft.nl
Dr Bill Hutchinson, Edith Cowan University, Australia w.hutchinson@cowan.edu.au
Professor Arthur Money, Henley Management College, UK arthurm@henleymc.ac.uk
Alan Mullally, Trinity College Dublin alan.mullally@tcd.ie
Professor Rene Pellisier, School of Business Leadership, South Africa
pellir@unisa.ac.za
Professor Dan Remenyi, Trinity College, Dublin, dan.remenyi@tcd.ie
Professor Les Worrall, University of Wolverhampton, UK, bu1996@wbs.wlv.ac.uk
Conference Committee:
The conference programme committee consists of key people in the information
systems community around the world. The following people have confirmed
their participation:
Frank Bannister (Trinity College Dublin), Jan Burn (Edith Cowan University),
Derek Bond (University of Ulster), Ann Brown (City University Business
School), Sean Connolly (Revenue Commissioners of Ireland), Anne Davies
(Queens University Belfast), Kevin Grant (Bell College), Chris Guest (Flintshire
County Council), Bill Hutchinson (Edith Cowan University), Mike Jackson
(University of Wolverhampton), Steve Jones, (Conwy County Borough Council),
Denise Leahy (Trinity College Dublin), Arthur Money (Henley Management
College), Atta Badii (Northampton University College), Chris Morse (OSI),
Rene Pellisier (School of Business Leadership), David Price (Henley Management
College), Dan Remenyi (Trinity College Dublin), Michael Sherwood-Smith
(UCD) David Taylor (CERTUS), Henry Watermeyer (University of the Witwatersrand),
Les Worrall (University of Wolverhampton).