THE E-GOVERNMENT ARTIFACT IN THE CONTEXT OF A DEVELOPING COUNTRY: TOWARDS A NOMADIC FRAMEWORK
Date
2009
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Abstract
This thesis is concerned with exploring alternative conceptualizations of the e-government artifact
relevant to developing countries in Africa. The premise is that e-government, as an artifact of human
conception, remains relatively poorly developed at the levels of theory, methodologies and practice. The
investigation is focused on two problematic areas of e-government: its conceptualization and
its
operationalization as an artifact. There is evidence to suggest that conceptualization of e-government
takes place at various levels
:
international, national, local. The thesis therefore explores how e-
government is taking form by focusing on the following research question:
"How is the e-government artifact conceptualized in the context of a developing country"?
The analysis draws on various perspectives; some of which are grounded on empirical results of the
study, while others are based on an analysis of literature. Under the alienating conditions of social
exclusion, the emergent e-government artifact emerges as an
evolving and technical artifact, with strong
managerialist orientations of augmenting and reinforcing central governments control over its polity
.
To achieve this defining logic, the focus or ideology for addressing the social problem of governance is
that of
information Taylorism
with an emphasis on economic rationality and some form of political
rationality. Two consequences are highlighted:
•
an evolution of public administration towards a technocracy, and
•
increasing the efficiency of the bureaucracy through managerialization.
To address the shortcomings of this artifact concept, the study further presents literature and insights
from prior analyses to underpin a
nomadic e-government model for building information infrastructures
(NECE Framework).
The emphasis of the framework is on the need to adopt long term organizing
visions in building these infrastructures by focusing on using the existing installed base as a foundation.
The nomadic framework, anchored on strong modular design borrowed from an information
infrastructure perspective, is clustered around three major layers of building
confident local
communities
; building
nomadic networks of governance
and building
flexible infrastructures
. The 'glue',
cementing these layers elevates a critical need for building
social, human, digital
and physical resources
targeting the individuals, various organizing forms and formal institutions, services and physical
infrastructure respectively. Such an approach to building an e-government information infrastructure is
postulated to minimize the unintended negative social implications of its adoption.
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Doctor of Philosophy thesis in Information Systems