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2003 National Conference on Digital Government Research
Call for Papers and Proposals
The National Science Foundation invites you to join dg.o2003, the national conference that brings together top computer science researchers, government agencies, e-commerce, the software industry, and members of the public with the aim of making online government systems available to citizens.
dg.o2003 welcomes proposals for papers, panels, system demonstrations, birds-of-a-feather themes, and case studies relating to any aspect of digital government, including (but not limited to) the following example topics:
IT-Enabled Government-Citizen Interaction:
- Integration of Data and Services
- Universal Access to Information and Services
- Public Policy and Organizational Management
- Digital Democracy and Governance
- Impact of More Transparent and Understandable Government Processes and Decision-Making
- IT Adoption in Government
- National and International Digital Government Efforts and Cooperation
IT Research:
- Geographic Information Systems
- Semantic Web
- The Grid
- Modalities, Multimedia Interfaces, and HCI
- Trust, Confidentiality, Ownership, Reliability
- Large Scale Data and Information Acquisition and Management
- Software Engineering of Large-Scale Government Projects
- Technology Transition
- Collaboration Tools
Government Application Domains:
- Electronic Grants Administration
- Environmental Management
- Electronic Rulemaking
- Interoperable Data, Networks and Architectures
- Long Term Preservation and Archiving of Government Information
- Security, Privacy, and Information Assurance
- Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement
- Crisis Management and Emergency Response
- Federal Statistics
This year we would like to feature "Multidisciplinary Aspects of Digital Government Research". Therefore, the conference organizers specifically encourage the submission of papers describing multidisciplinary projects. These are projects that advance the state of research in more than one field of endeavor simultaneously and significantly.
For inspiration and guidance in drafting successful papers and proposals for the 2003 conference, dg.o recommends that you explore these Web pages:
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