[Asis-l] Full Program: 9th International Conference on Digital Government Research
javed mostafa
sohelw at yahoo.com
Tue May 6 11:04:51 EDT 2008
Full Program: The 9th International Conference on
Digital Government Research, May 18-21, 2008
Please come and join us in Montreal, Canada for the
2008 Digital Government Conference! For the final
program, we selected papers, panels, and presentations
covering cutting-edge studies and projects (see
below). In keeping with past DG.O conferences we
would like to encourage maximum audience participation
and your presence will add significantly to what is
shaping up to be an exciting event!
To register, please visit:
https://www.regonline.com/builder/site/Default.aspx?eventid=197025
Conference web site: http://www.dgo2008.org/
Final Program for DG.O 2008 Conference
MONDAY May 19 10:30-12:00
SESSION 1: Social Networks and Web 2.0
Session Chair: Janice Warner, Georgian Court
University
· Next Generation FoI Between Information
Management and Web 2.0
Herbert Kubicek. (Institute for Information Management
Bremen, Germany)
· A New Paradigm for Designing E-Government:
Web 2.0 and Experience Design
James P. Zappen (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
United States), Teresa Harrison (University at Albany,
United States) and David Watson (Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, United States)
· CI-KNOW: Recommendation based on Social
Networks
Yun Huang (Northwestern University, United States),
Noshir Contractor (Northwestern University, United
States) and York Yao (Northwestern University, United
States).
SESSION 2: Regulations and Laws
Session Chair: Soon Ae Chun (CUNY)
· Relating Taxonomies with Regulations
Chin Pang Cheng (Stanford University, United States),
Jiayi Pan (Stanford University, United States), Gloria
Lau (Stanford University, United States), Kincho Law
(Stanford University, United States) and Albert Jones
(NIST, United States)
· A Genetic Algorithm for Segmentation and
Information Retrieval of SEC Regulatory Filings
Joshua Carroll (University of Pennsylvania, United
States) and Thomas Lee (UPenn/Wharton, United States).
· Exploratory text mining of ocean law to
measure overlapping jurisdictions
Julia Ekstrom (University of California, Santa
Barbara, United States) and Gloria Lau (Stanford
University, United States).
PANEL 1: Digital Governmentâs Critical Enabler:
Identity Management?
Panel Moderator: Philip Seltsikas (UNIVERSITY OF
SYDNEY, Australia) ,
Panelists: Ignacio Alamillo (CATCERT, Spain), W. Mark
Anderson (State of Illinois Central Management
Services, United States), Dan Combs (National
Emergency Preparedness Coordinating Council, United
States), Matthew Dunlap (Department of the Secretary
of State, State of Maine, United States) and Georgia
Marsh (KPMG, IT Advisory/Public Sector, , United
States).
MONDAY May 19 1:30- 3:00
SESSION 3: Voting
Session Chair: Marijn Janssen (Delft University of
Technology, The Netherlands)
· Specifying and Verifying Requirements for
Election Processes
Borislava Simidchieva (University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, United States), Matthew Marzilli (University
of Massachusetts, Amherst, United States), Lori Clarke
(UMass Amherst, United States) and Leon Osterweil
(UMass Amherst, United States).
· Design Research in Digital Government: A
Query Prosthesis for Voters
Scott Robertson. (University of Hawai, United States)
· Exploring the Characteristics of Opinion
Expressions for Political Opinion Classification
Bei Yu (Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern
University, United States), Stefan Kaufmann(Department
of Linguistics, Northwestern University, United
States) and Daniel Diermeier (Kellogg School of
Management, Northwestern University, United States).
SESSION 4: Emergency Response and Disaster Management
Session Chair: Laura Steinberg (Southern Methodist
University)
· Using 9-1-1 Call Data and the Time-Space
Permutation Scan Statistic for Emergency Event
Detection
Hector Jasso (University of California, San Diego,
United States), William Hodgkiss (University of
California, San Diego, United States), Chaitan Baru
(University of California, San Diego, United States,
Tony Fountain (University of California, San Diego,
United States), Don Reich (Public Safety Network,
United States) and Kurt Warner (Public Safety Network,
United States).
· Florida Public Hurricane Loss Model
(FPHLM): Research Experience in System Integration (C)
Shu-Ching Chen (Florida International University,
United States), Min Chen (University of Montana,
United States), Na Zhao (Florida International
University, United States), Shahid Hamid (Florida
International University, United States), Khalid
Saleem (Florida International University, United
States) and Kasturi Chatterjee(Florida International
University, United States).
· Towards a Business Continuity Information
Network for Rapid Disaster Recovery (C)
Khalid Saleem (Florida International University,
United States), Steven Luis (Florida International
University, United States), Yi Deng (Florida
International University, United States), Shu-Ching
Chen (Florida International University, United
States), Vagelis Hristidis (Florida International
University, United States) and Tao Li (Florida
International University, United States).
PANEL2: The North American Workgroup on Digital
Government : Transnational Projects and Processes
Panel Moderator: Alain Mondeau, HEC Montreal
Panelists: Rejean Roy (CEFRIO, Canada), Anthony
Cresswell (Univ. at Albany, USA) and Irak Lopez Davila
(INFOTEC, Mexico).
MONDAY May 19 3:30- 5:00
SESSION 5: Information Sharing and Integration
Session Chair: Andrew Philpot, ISI/USC
· Stage models for creating joined-up
government: From local to nation-wide integration (C)
Bram Klievink (Delft University of Technology,
Netherlands), and Marijn Janssen (Delft University of
Technology, Netherlands).
· A review of the political nature of ICT in
G2G integration - based on 3 cases from the GeoICT
domain
Walter de Vries. (ITC, Netherlands)
· A Regional Approach to Geographic
Information Sharing in Northern New Jersey, USA (C)
Francisco Artigas (Meadowlands Environmental
Research Institute, United States), Arfaa Mujeeb
(Enrollment Reporting & Data Management - Columbia
University, United States), Dom Elefante (Meadowlands
Environmental Research Institute, United States) ,
Alex Marti (Earth & Environmental Sciences - Rutgers
University, United States) and Eric Yadlovski
(Meadowlands Environmental Research Institute, United
States).
SESSION 6: The Role of Citizens
Session Chair: Bob Maslyn, GSA
· User-centered E-Government Services:
Benefits, Costs, and Research Needs (C)
John Bertot Florida (State University, United States),
Paul Jaeger (University of Maryland College Park,
United States) and Charles McClure (Florida State
University, United States).
· Deliberation in the Wild: A Visualization
Tool for Blog Discovery and Citizen-to-Citizen
Participation
Candida Tauro (Department of Computer Science,
Virginia Tech, United States) , Sameer Ahuja
(Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech, United
States), Manuel Perez-Quinones (Virginia Tech, United
States), Andrea Kavanaugh (Virginia Tech, United
States) and Philip Isenhour (Virginia Tech, United
States).
· What should government agencies do with
information that is relevant for citizens? (C)
Albert Meijer (Utrecht University, Netherlands) and
Marcel Thaens (Erasmus University Rótterdam,
Netherlands).
Panel 3: Building a Sustainable International Digital
Government Research Community
Panel Moderator: Valerie Gregg (DGR, United States).
Panelists: Sharon Dawes (Center for Technology in
Government, Albany), Peter Shane (Center for
Interdisciplinary Law and Policy Studies, Ohio State
University), Theresa Pardo (Center for Technology in
Government, Albany), G.P. Patil (Pennsylvania State
University)
MONDAY May 19 6:00- 8:30PM
SESSION: Posters and Demos
TUESDAY May 20 10:30-12:00
SESSION 7: Public Safety
Session Chair: Judy Cushing, Evergreen State College
· Natural Language Processing and
e-Government: Crime Information Extraction from
Heterogeneous Data Sources
Justin Ku (School of Information System & Technology
at Claremont Graduate University, United States),
Gondy Leroy (Claremont Graduate University, United
States) and Alicia Iriberi (School of Information
System & Technology at Claremont Graduate University,
United States).
· Mapping Theory to Practice: A Cartographic
Analysis of Public Safety Networks
Christine B. Williams (Bentley Collage, United
States), Steve Sawyer (The Pennsylvania State
University, United States), Jane Fedorowicz (Bentley
College, United States), M. Lynne Markus (Bentley
College, United States), Martin Dias (Bentley College,
United States), Dax Jacobson (Bentley College, United
States), Michael Tyworth (Penn State University,
United States) and Sonia Vilvovksy (Bentley College,
United States).
· Uses of Artificial Intelligence in the
Brazilian Customs Fraud Detection System (C)
Luciano Antonio Digiampietri (Institute of Computing,
UNICAMP, Brazil), Norton T. Roman (Institute of
Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil), Luis A. A.
Meira(Institute of Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil), Jorge
Jambeiro Filho (Brazilian Federal Revenue, Brazil),
Cristiano D. Ferreira (Institute of Computing,
UNICAMP, Brazil), Andreia A. Kondo(Institute of
Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil), Rodrigo C.
Rezende(Institute of Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil),
Everton R. Constantino(Institute of Computing,
UNICAMP, Brazil), Bruno C. Brandao (Institute of
Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil), Helder S. Ribeiro
(Institute of Computing, UNICAMP, Brazil), Pietro K.
Carolino (CLE-IFCH, UNICAMP, Brazil), Antonella Lanna
(Brazilian Federal Revenue, Brazil), Jacques Wainer
(Professor of Computer Science, Brazil) and Siome
Goldenstein (Professor of Computer Science, Brazil).
SESSION 8: Trust and Privacy
Session Chair: Yao-Hua Tan, Vrije University Amsterdam
· Gaining and Losing Trust in Electronic
Government Services: a UK-based Case Study
Anthony Meehan (The Open University, United Kingdom )
and Mike Grimsley. (Sheffield Hallam University,
United Kingdom)
· A Citizen Privacy Protection Model for
E-Government Mashup Services
Janice Warner (Georgian Court University, United
States) and Soon Ae Chun. (City University of New
York, United States)
· Regional Telecommunication Incident
Response: Delivering Public Value Through Increased
Trust (C)
Theresa Pardo (Center for Technology in Government,
University at Albany, SUNY, United States), Anna
Raup-Kounovsky (Center for Technology in Government,
University at Albany, SUNY, United States), Donna
Canestraro (Center for Technology in Government,
University at Albany, SUNY, United States) and Dennis
Taratus (New York State Department of Public Service ,
United States).
Panel 4: Understanding Government Contexts in
GeoCollaborative Crisis Management -- Cross-Agency and
Cross-Government Perspectives
Panel Moderators: Guoray Cai and Brian Tomaszewski
(Pennsylvania State University, USA).
SESSION 9: Local Governments
Session Chair: Yigal Arens (ISI/USC)
· A Domain-Specific Language for Urban
Simulation Variables
Alan Borning (University of Washington, United
States), Hana Sevcikova (University of Washington,
United States), and Paul Waddell (University of
Washington, United States).
· Municipal WiFi and Policy Implications for
People With Disabilities
Paul Baker (Center for Advanced Communication Policy,
Georgia Institute of Technology, United States),
Jarice Hanson (University of Massachussets, United
States) and Avonne Bell (Center for Advanced
Communication Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology,
United States).
· Supporting Self-Evaluation in Local
Government via KDD (C)
Hye-Chung Kum (University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, United States), Dean F. Duncan (University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, United States) and Joy
Stewart (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
United States).
SESSION 10: E-Rulemaking and Ontologies
Session Chair: Stuart Shulman, University of
Pittsburgh
· Active Learning for e-Rulemaking: Public
Comment Categorization
Stephen Purpura (Cornell University, United States),
Claire Cardie (Cornell University, United States) and
Jesse Simons (Cornell University, United States)
· A Study in Rule-Specific Issue
Categorization for e-Rulemaking
Claire Cardie (Cornell University, United States),
Cynthia Farina (Cornell University, United States),
Adil Aijaz (Yahoo, United States), Matt Rawding
(Cornell University, United States) and Stephen
Purpura (Cornell University, United States).
· Ontology Generation for Large Email
Collections
Hui Yang (Language Technologies Institute, School of
Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, United
States) and Jamie Callan (Carnegie Mellon University,
United States).
Panel 5: Bridging the Terms and Vocabulary Gap among
Research and Practitioners Communities
Panel Moderator: Madeleine Siösteen Thiel (VINNOVA,
Sweden) and Marijn Janssen (Delft University of
Technology, Netherlands).
Panelists: Madeleine Siösteen Thiel (VINNOVA,
Sweden), Yannis Larios (Advisor to the Secretary for
Digital Planning, Ministry of Economy & Finance of
Greece), Ernst Bürger (Office of the Task Force
Deutschland-Online at the Federal Ministry of the
Interior in Germany), Sharon Dawes (Center for
Technology in Government, University at Albany), Tony
Cresswell (University at Albany).
TUESDAY May 20 3:30- 5:00
SESSION 11: Open Standards and IT Adoption
Session Chair: Alan Borning, University of Washington
· Implementing Open Standards: A Case Study
of Massachusetts Open Formats Policy
Rajiv Shah (University of Illinois at Chicago, United
States), Jay Kesan (University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, United States) and Andrew Kennis
(University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United
States).
· The Adoption of Public Agency Web Sites: On
Efficiency, Power, and Legitimacy
Kyu-Nahm Jun (Wayne State U, Korea, South) and
Christopher Weare (University of Southern California,
United States).
· BPM and UMM in Business Process Modeling
Hafedh Chourabi (Laval University, Canada), Faouzi
Bouslama (Laval University, Canada) and Sehl Mellouli
(Laval University, Canada).
STUDENT SESSION
Session Chair: Jaime Arguello, Carnegie Mellon
University
· Public IT Outsourcing Research â the
Directions to Go
Sonia Vilvovsky (Bentley collage, United States).
· Remote sensing based approach for
monitoring urban growth in Mexico city, Mexico: A case
study
Vincent Obade (Graduate student, United State).
· Exploring U.S. E-Diplomacy and Non-State
Actorsâ Increasing Communicative Influence
Kimberly Stoltzfus(University of California, Santa
Barbara, United States).
Wednesday May 21 10:30- 12:00
SESSION 12: Foundations and Social Actors
Session Chair: Ed Hovy, ISI/USC
· Governance in the information age: a
research framework for an uncertain future
Sharon Dawes (Center for Technology in Government,
University at Albany, United States).
· Adaptive Capacities of State IT
Departments: CIOs Coping with Change
Margaret Reid (University of Arkansas, United States),
Myria Allen (University of Arkansas, United States),
Cynthia Riemenschneider (University of Arkansas,
United States) and Deborah Armstrong (Florida State
University, United States).
· Laying the Foundations for Public
Participation and Value Advocacy: Interaction Design
for a Large Scale Urban Simulation
Batya Friedman (University of Washington, United
States), Alan Borning (University of Washington,
United States), Janet Davis (Grinnell Collage, United
States), Brian Gill (Seattle Pacific University,
United States), Peter Kahn (University of Washington,
United States), Travis Kriplean (University of
Washington, United States) and Peyina Lin (University
of Washington, United States).
SESSION 13: IT Applications
Session Chair: J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, Centro de
Investigación y Docencia Económicas, Mexico
· Innovations Steps in the Diffusion of
e-Customs Solution
Marta Raus (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Zurich (ETHZ), Switzerland), Barbara Flügge (SAP
Research, Switzerland)and Roman Boutellier (Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ).
· Making Mobility Work in Child Protective
Services: Lessons from the Field (C)
Meghan E. Cook (SUNY Albany - Center for Technology in
Government, United States) and Natalie Helbig (SUNY
Albany - Center for Technology in Government ,United
States).
PANEL 6: Federal E-Government Without the President's
Management Agenda:What Stays, What Changes, What Goes
Away?
Panel Moderator:Stephen Holden (Touchstone Consulting
Group)
Panelists: Robert Albicker (Deloitte Consulting),
Daniel Chenok (Touchstone Consulting Group) and
Jeffery Seifert (Congressional Research Service,
United States).
____________________________________________________________________________________
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