What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia

This chapter investigates the challenges and achievements of e-government development in Malaysia. After carefully examining the findings of egovernment ranking world over by the United Nations, The Centre of Public Policy, Brown University, United States of America and Waseda University Institute,...

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Main Author: Alhabshi, S.M.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2009
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/1/9__What_We_Have_%26_Have-Not_e-Government_In_Malaysia.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/
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spelling my.um.eprints.109022014-07-10T01:17:01Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/ What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia Alhabshi, S.M. G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation This chapter investigates the challenges and achievements of e-government development in Malaysia. After carefully examining the findings of egovernment ranking world over by the United Nations, The Centre of Public Policy, Brown University, United States of America and Waseda University Institute, Japan; disparities in Malaysia’s e-government ranking amongst the three institutions was evident. It is discernible that the different methodological criteria employed by these institutions served as one of the fundamental factors attributable to the varying results. However, findings from these institutions unearthed some major problems and challenges bedeviling egovernment in Malaysia. This chapter went further to examine the chemistry of e-government in Malaysia to find out how far it has achieved and to ascertain the challenges undermining its further development. Questionnaires and interviews were used to gather information. Questionnaires were administered to public officials in federal ministries and departments and 7 e-Government pilot project managers were engaged in interviews. The outcome of the survey concluded that while the Waseda University Institute of egovernment and the United Nations were exposed to adequate information on e-Government development in Malaysia, the Centre of Public Policy, Brown University, USA, lacked such opportunity and exposure. It is pertinent that e-Government development in Malaysia is still developing and as such, for an accelerated and resilient development, this chapter advocates for an overall consolidation of e-Government mechanisms such as regulations, capacity development, security and policy environment. 2009-09 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/1/9__What_We_Have_%26_Have-Not_e-Government_In_Malaysia.pdf Alhabshi, S.M. (2009) What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia. In: International Conference on Malaysia: Malaysia in Global Perspective, 27-28 September 2009, Cairo University, Egypt.
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
spellingShingle G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
Alhabshi, S.M.
What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
description This chapter investigates the challenges and achievements of e-government development in Malaysia. After carefully examining the findings of egovernment ranking world over by the United Nations, The Centre of Public Policy, Brown University, United States of America and Waseda University Institute, Japan; disparities in Malaysia’s e-government ranking amongst the three institutions was evident. It is discernible that the different methodological criteria employed by these institutions served as one of the fundamental factors attributable to the varying results. However, findings from these institutions unearthed some major problems and challenges bedeviling egovernment in Malaysia. This chapter went further to examine the chemistry of e-government in Malaysia to find out how far it has achieved and to ascertain the challenges undermining its further development. Questionnaires and interviews were used to gather information. Questionnaires were administered to public officials in federal ministries and departments and 7 e-Government pilot project managers were engaged in interviews. The outcome of the survey concluded that while the Waseda University Institute of egovernment and the United Nations were exposed to adequate information on e-Government development in Malaysia, the Centre of Public Policy, Brown University, USA, lacked such opportunity and exposure. It is pertinent that e-Government development in Malaysia is still developing and as such, for an accelerated and resilient development, this chapter advocates for an overall consolidation of e-Government mechanisms such as regulations, capacity development, security and policy environment.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Alhabshi, S.M.
author_facet Alhabshi, S.M.
author_sort Alhabshi, S.M.
title What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
title_short What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
title_full What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
title_fullStr What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed What we have & have-not : e-government in Malaysia
title_sort what we have & have-not : e-government in malaysia
publishDate 2009
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/1/9__What_We_Have_%26_Have-Not_e-Government_In_Malaysia.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/10902/
_version_ 1643688914382225408
score 13.211869