Engaging Citizens on the Internet: An Assessment of Local Governments in Ohio

Engaging Citizens on the Internet: An Assessment of Local Governments in Ohio

Mark K. Cassell, John Hoornbeek
Copyright: © 2010 |Pages: 19
ISBN13: 9781615209316|ISBN10: 161520931X|ISBN13 Softcover: 9781616922979|EISBN13: 9781615209323
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-931-6.ch017
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MLA

Cassell, Mark K., and John Hoornbeek. "Engaging Citizens on the Internet: An Assessment of Local Governments in Ohio." Citizens and E-Government: Evaluating Policy and Management, edited by Christopher G. Reddick, IGI Global, 2010, pp. 298-316. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-931-6.ch017

APA

Cassell, M. K. & Hoornbeek, J. (2010). Engaging Citizens on the Internet: An Assessment of Local Governments in Ohio. In C. Reddick (Ed.), Citizens and E-Government: Evaluating Policy and Management (pp. 298-316). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-931-6.ch017

Chicago

Cassell, Mark K., and John Hoornbeek. "Engaging Citizens on the Internet: An Assessment of Local Governments in Ohio." In Citizens and E-Government: Evaluating Policy and Management, edited by Christopher G. Reddick, 298-316. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2010. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-931-6.ch017

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Abstract

Some literature on E-government has envisioned that the internet would foster a linear progression toward new, productive, and more democratic relationships between governments and citizens (Layne and Lee, 2001). Recent literature has questioned the pace at which these relationships are developing (Coursey and Norris, 2008). This chapter presents empirical results relating to citizen-government relations on the internet that are based on an assessment of the worldwide web presence of 428 local governments in northeast Ohio. Northeast Ohio provides a useful picture of E-government-citizen relationships because it includes a range of local government forms (counties, townships, etc.), urban and rural populations, and Midwestern influences that many consider “typical” of American states. The website reviews conducted assess citizen-government engagement in a variety of areas. The measures used include simple engagements such as the ability to sign up for email updates and the presence of event calendars to more involved interactions such as blogs, e-pay services, and open records requests. Using these measures, we assess citizen-government engagement among local governments in our sample. Follow up interviews with local governments that rate high on these measures are used to further ascertain the extent of engagement and the benefits they yield for government-citizen relationships and service delivery. This information, in turn, provides lessons relating to citizen-local government relationships that may be useful to other government entities. Analyses to ascertain why some local governments seek greater internet engagement with citizens than others are also be conducted.

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