eGovt in LDCs Cases Competition

From: Richard Heeks (mzdssrbh@MAN.AC.UK)
Date: Sun Aug 11 2002 - 12:51:12 CDT

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    Message-ID:  <E17dwsN-000NRi-00@probity.mcc.ac.uk>
    Date:         Sun, 11 Aug 2002 18:51:12 +0100
    From: Richard Heeks <mailto:mzdssrbh@MAN.AC.UK>
    Subject:      eGovt in LDCs Cases Competition
    To: mailto:INTDEV-L@PETE.URI.EDU
    

    <pre> Dear Colleague

    eGOVERNMENT CASE STUDY COMPETITION: £200 Prizes

    Case studies of e-government success and failure are of considerable value as an online resource. I would thus like to generate some more cases, with a particular focus on success and failure factors.

    With this in mind, I would like to invite you to submit a case study of e-government success/failure in a developing or transitional country. The required format is given at the end of this message, or you can submit online via the rather unlovely page I've loaded at: www.egov4dev.org/casestudy1.htm

    To provide some incentive/reward for efforts, those cases submitted by August 31 will be judged on the basis of their learning/knowledge-building value, and the authors of the top three cases will each receive a £200 payment. Value comes especially from balanced and objective rather than 'rose-tinted' and subjective cases.

    Note that e-government cases must involve a public sector organisation as at least one of the users, owners or funders of an ICT-based system.

    If you have any feedback or questions on this idea or the case formats, do please contact me.

    Richard Heeks (mailto:richard.heeks@man.ac.uk) Moderator, egov4dev

    --------------------- FORMAT FOR eGOVERNMENT SUCCESS/FAILURE CASE STUDIES

    1. You: your name and email address (indicate if you wish to remain anonymous in the online version of the case).

    2. Title: give your case study a short e-government-related title.

    3. Organisation: the case study organisation's name (again indicate if you wish the specific name to be anonymous in the online version).

    4. Region: the region of the world in which the organisation is located (e.g. North Africa, South Asia, etc.) – we are only seeking cases from developing or transitional economies.

    5. Date: the start date of operation of the application.

    6. Application: the type of e-government application involved
    (e.g. management information system, intranet, Web-enabled citizen services, etc.) and the main hardware/software used
    (c.100 words maximum).

    7. Application description: what exactly does the application do in terms of processes performed (or, for a failure, what was it supposed to do) (c.150 words max.)?

    8. Application purpose: why was this application introduced
    (c.100 words max.)?

    9. Stakeholders: who has been affected by this application?
    (c.100 words max.)?

    10. Impact: what have been the costs and benefits of this application (try to quantify if possible) (c.200 words max.)?

    11. Evaluation: has this been a success, or a partial failure, or a total failure (c.50 words max.)?

    12. Enablers/CSFs: what were the main enablers or critical success factors that helped the project (maximum of three factors)?

    13. Constraints/CFFs: what were the main constraints/challenges or critical failure factors that caused problems for the project (maximum of three factors)?

    14. Recommendations: on the basis of the case, what key actions would you recommend to other e-government practitioners (either best practices to adopt, or mistakes to avoid) (maximum of three recommendations)?

    15. Further information: any relevant Web link or contact name for further info.

    Submit case to: mailto:richard.heeks@man.ac.uk
    ---------------------

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dr Richard Heeks Senior Lecturer, Information Systems & Development Institute for Development Policy & Management University of Manchester Precinct Centre Manchester M13 9GH U.K.

    Phone: +44-161-275-2870 Fax: +44-161-273-8829 Email: mailto:richard.heeks@man.ac.uk IDPM Web: http://www.man.ac.uk/idpm

    </pre>



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