Fwd: [CSL]: New Journal - Information Polity
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From: John Armitage <john.armitage@UNN.AC.UK> Date: Mon Apr 29, 2002 03:40:15 AM US/Eastern To: CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE@JISCMAIL.AC.UK Subject: [CSL]: New Journal - Information Polity Reply-To: The Cyber-Society-Live mailing list is a moderated discussion list for those interested <CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
-----Original Message-----From: Whiteside Lynn [mailto:L.Whiteside@gcal.ac.uk] Sent: 26 April 2002 16:12 To: 'Armitage, John' Subject: New Journal - Information Polity
Dear John Could you please considering including a flyer within Cyber Society for the new journal I am editing - Information Polity: the international journal of government and democracy in the information age. This journal is published by IOS Press in the Netherlands.
The journal aims to publish work from academics that is both of top quality and, equally, of high strategic relevance to practitioners. Equally, the journal is intent on publishing work undertaken by practitioners - professional, administrative and political - who are actively engaged in the broad arenas of government and democracy, whether at local, regional, national or supra-national levels.
The journal is both international and comparative in its perspectives and welcomes articles from scholars and practitioners throughout the world.
The journal is a tangible expression of the awareness that ICT, including the Internet, is of deepening significance for all polities as new forms of government and democratic practice are sought throughout the world.
The journal aims to publish articles on political, economic, legal, managerial, organizational and wider social themes and issues as they relate to policy developments surrounding information & communications technologies [ICT] in government and democracy. Examples of such themes and issues are:
* The modernization of government and ICT; * Consumer responsive government; * Joined up government and ICT; * The globalisation of government and ICT; * Virtual government; * Data privacy, protection and security; * Democratic innovation and ICT; * The citizen, the state and ICT; * Changing ICT-supported democratic practices in the contemporary polity; * Public policies for ICT development and adoption;
Publishing in the Journal The journal is keen to receive well-written journal articles from its targeted authors on topics as stated above. Articles submitted for consideration must be written in English. Academic articles submitted should normally not exceed 6000 words in length [including all footnotes]. Articles in the form of authoritative, well-researched case studies will be welcomed and will not normally exceed 4000 words. The journal will welcome polemical articles as well as those deriving from research and practice. The journal will also commission book reviews.
I look forward to hearing from you in the near future.
Best Wishes
Professor John Taylor Editor-in-Chief Information Polity Tel - (0044) 141 331 3129 Email - jta@gcal.ac.uk
Lynn Whiteside Assistant Registrar Caledonian Business School Tel - 0141 331 8620 Email - L.Whiteside@gcal.ac.uk
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jeremy hunsinger jhuns@vt.edu on the ibook www.cddc.vt.edu www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy www.dromocracy.com
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jeremy hunsinger