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Editorial

Editorial: Information Polity publishes more than strong empirical studies: It is a rich platform for learning and debate

Details

Citation

Meijer A & Webster W (2023) Editorial: Information Polity publishes more than strong empirical studies: It is a rich platform for learning and debate. Information Polity, 28 (1), pp. 1-3. https://doi.org/10.3233/ip-239001

Abstract
First paragraph: Like other journals, we have a key focus on innovative empirical studies, which in our case advances our understanding of issues relating to the information polity. We are open to publishing both qualitative and quantitative research-based studies and we strongly encourage authors to submit studies based on innovative methodologies, such as living lab studies or survey experiments. This issue contains highly interesting contributions on digitalization as organizational work (Gidlund & Heidlund, 2023), e-credentials markets (Schedler et al., 2023), public sector digital transformation barriers (Eden et al., 2023), social media consumption and political distrust in Egypt (Ghorbani et al., 2023) and media users’ and professionals’ responses to personal data receipts (Van den Broek & Van Buggenhout, 2023). Such unique contributions to knowledge will continue to form the backbone of the journal. However, our ambition goes further than this. We aim to be a broad platform for learning and debate for the academic community of e-government scholars.

Keywords
Public Administration; Sociology and Political Science; Communication; Information Systems

Journal
Information Polity: Volume 28, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date02/03/2023
Publication date online02/03/2023
Date accepted by journal02/02/2023
PublisherIOS Press
ISSN1570-1255

People (1)

Professor William Webster

Professor William Webster

Personal Chair, Management, Work and Organisation