ABSTRACT
E-Governance involves government, internet and communication technologies (ICT), organizations, and society. It has expanded to include domains such as agriculture, services, knowledge management and so forth. The domains with their inherent social, cultural, and political factors influence adaptation and selection of the latest ICT innovations by E-Governance. Innovation scholars studied adaptation and selection in socio-technical systems and for effective transitions suggested the need for innovations to cumulate as stable designs; E-Governance systems are no different. In this paper, by examining the interoperations (i.e. interactions with rulesets) during development and deployment (situations) of E-Governance systems we can get insights into stable designs and transitions. The relationships that organizations exhibit among themselves and the coordination of their internal components can provide insights into interoperations (phenomena). We need to observe the phenomena in situations where it occurs; therefore, selected a case study method. To capture diverse analytic and heuristic situations, a multi-case study method is selected. The findings show that a technology-based solution achieves only transactional effectiveness and service delivery efficiency. For a successful transition, stabilization of designs is necessary which in turn requires interoperations that bring alignment of organizational internal components to the relationships and coevolution of other entities such as society.
Notes
1. The organization’s selection, variation, and retention impact the way society absorbs innovation (naturalistic approach).
2. National eGovernance Plan formulated by DeitY has defined mission mode projects that have defined objectives, scopes, and implementation timelines and milestones, as well as measurable outcomes and service levels.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Lakshminarayana Kompella
Lakshminarayana Kompella, Ph.D., is a faculty in the School of Management, National Institute of Technology Warangal, Warangal, India. He is a researcher and consultant on the socio-technical systems, software engineering, and E-Governance. His specialty is technology forecasting of fast-changing technologies by identifying necessary organizational and social changes to enable diffusion and absorption of technology. He is a reviewer for academic peer-reviewed journals Technological Forecasting and Social Change (TFS), Information Technology and People (IT&P), and Managerial & Decision Economics, and Journal of Software: Evolution & Process. Apart from publications in international journals and conferences also filed 2 patents related to software engineering with US-PTO.