A European Perspective Towards Online One-Stop Government: The eGOV Project
A European Perspective Towards Online One-Stop Government: The eGOV Project
A European Perspective Towards Online One-Stop Government: The eGOV Project
Abstract
e-Government reflects current visions for public administrations towards modernization and reorganization. Therefore,
online one-stop Government targets the improvement of customer-to-government interactions. It provides electronic public
services of distinct public authorities to citizens and businesses in a customer-oriented manner from a single point of access.
The customer-oriented approach towards online one-stop Government further offers online public services 24 h a day from
anywhere in an easy-to-use and simple way according to the customers needs. Structuring public services around citizens
life-episodes and businesses specific situations represents such an approach. To speed up innovative developments in the
field, the European Commission has provided substantial funding. eGOV is such an EC-funded project that aims at
developing an integrated platform for realizing online one-stop Government. Key innovations of eGOV are: a global access
point to enter different governmental services and information at distinct levels of public administration and with different
devices; and the development of online one-stop Government process models. To develop an integrated one-stop
Government platform, different requirements have to be fulfilled. Here, an holistic development approach provides an
important guideline to address different aspects impacting advanced one-stop Government systems. With such an holistic
approach, despite the technical developments, integrated process models for online public service delivery are put forward.
Furthermore, the legal aspects framing one-stop Government developments and the social impacts of such developments for
different user groups are investigated.
2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: e-Government; One-stop Government; eGOV; Integrated service modeling; One-stop Government process models
1567-4223 / 02 / $ see front matter 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII: S1567-4223( 02 )00008-X
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ly, the Governments of the world are rather fragmented into functional units that are independent of
each other. E-Governmentand specifically onestop Governmentcalls for an integration and networking of public authorities, which will have a
tremendous impact on organizational structures and
responsibilities, on data access and on the way
governmental work will be performed in the future.
The visions of e-Government go far beyond what
has been realized up to now. A rather visionary,
though holistic, view is reflected in the German
Memorandum Electronic Government as Pivotal
Vision to Modernize Governance and Government
[2], which was presented to the German public about
one year ago. Yet, one year after the Memorandum,
Germanys public administrations are still looking
for integrated developments. With e-Envoy 1 (all
public services available online until 2005), the UK
has also set an important initiative towards e-Government and towards an integration of e-Government
implementations throughout the country. However,
this initiative is still at a superficial level. What can
be recognized from the many initiatives and strategies towards e-Government is a huge demand for
holistic approaches going far beyond present-day
technical developments.
The adaptation of new technological advancements requires a careful investigation into the
philosophy, structure and productive processes of the
public organizations participating in e-Government.
In this respect, many projects have emerged and also
the European Commission (EC) has established
several initiatives to encourage developments in the
field of e-Government (e.g. the eEuropeinitiative [3]
or the Fifth Framework Program of the EC [5]). With
the latter, the EC provides huge funding to stimulate
the creation of the next generation of user-friendly,
cost-effective and interoperable public services and
systems for the different user groups of public
administrations (citizens, businesses and administrations themselves). One of the key issues in this
program is to meet the user demands for flexible
access, for everybody, from anywhere and at any
time.
and without knowledge of the functional fragmentation of the respective public authorities;
allowing customers to approach and monitor
different stages of service performance (simple
information gathering; interacting with an authority; contracting (online application); service
delivery and payment; complaints and other
aftercare needs such as feeding statistics or
feedback);
providing customers with pre-information at
various stages and in various depths;
providing help in filling in online forms, etc.;
clarifying and updating underlying legal issues,
laws and prescriptions;
translating the demand for a service (a license,
etc.) from the citizens / business world to legaladministrative jargon and vice versa;
matching online public services with the jurisdictional structure (competency in the legal
sense) and routing the citizen demand to the
relevant back office;
keeping track of the process, handling freedom
of information requests and other due process
requirements.
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The holistic development approach supports considerations on distinct levels of abstraction and from
different targets. Smooth integration of the various
aspects and their mutual interdependencies is important. For example, technical developments of the
eGOV integrated platform have to be accompanied
by process investigations, developments of one-stop
Government services as well as the analysis of
judicial and societal issues. For a more detailed
discussion of this holistic reference framework, the
reader is referred to Ref. [18].
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Fig. 3. General system architecture of the eGOV online one-stop Government platform.
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sector. Traunmuller
and Lenk [16] suggest a differentiation of four perspectives to understand con4
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Traunmuller
point out (e.g. Refs. [10,16,17]), this is
not always feasible and possible, especially for some
types of administrative processes which are specific
to the public sector. In general, governmental processes may be classified into the following four types
(cf. Ref. [11]):
1. Routine processes are recurrent and well structured. They can be treated in a similar way to
business processes and are extensively formalizable (e.g. applying for a passport). Some of
them can even be completely automated.
2. Individualized case processing covers situations
where standard cases cannot be treated as such,
because of the special circumstances the customer is in (e.g. application for social benefit of
a deeply in debt citizen who is raising his / her
child alone, or enrolling a child in school before
the date of legal enrollment). It requires much
interaction with the customer and high sensitivity of the administrator in charge of the specific
situation the applicant is in. This type of process
characterizes one of the core businesses of
public administrations, where a large amount of
non-instrumental rationality is important and
where secure and organized social welfare has
to be established for the applicant.
3. Negotiation processes are characterized by a
large amount of interaction and many parties
involved with partially contrary positions. Complex investigations of the circumstances and
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laws will appear. eGOV will provide some investigations and insights into this matter.
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8. Concluding remarks
For some years, e-Government developments have
emerged around the globe. As discussed in this
contribution, e-Government may be perceived differently on distinct abstraction levels and even with
varying focuses of application. Since Europe is
characterized by many different constitutions, distinct approaches to the realization of e-Government
can also be encountered and advancements in the
various countries have reached different stages of
maturity.
The European Commission has launched substantial funding to facilitate innovative developments in
close collaboration with, for example, Europeanwide projects. eGOV is such a project that aims at
the development of an integrated platform for realizing online one-stop Government. The core requirements for online one-stop Government and the
objectives of eGOV have been discussed in this
contribution. Because developments in e-Government touch upon different disciplines, an holistic
approach is crucial.
The complexity and multifariousness of the aspects touching upon e-Government developments
call for further research and investigations in the
field. Among these, some of the most urgent issues
are an integrated service modeling that calls for
semantic standardization and that allows intelligent
service bundling according to the specific situation
and context of a citizen or business partner; the
readiness for organizational change and new work
responsibilities of public employees; and the adaptation (or creation) of a legal framework to fully enable
electronic public service provision. Within Europe,
small steps towards these investigations have already
been made. However, to reach the full potential for a
virtual public administration, a huge demand for
integration will be encountered.
References
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2000 (http: / / www.ladocfrancaise.gouv.fr / BRP/ 014000291 /
0000.pdf) [13 / 8 / 2001].
[2] Deutsches Memorandum E-Government, Electronic Govern
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zur Modernisierung von Staat und
Verwaltung, Fachausschuss Verwaltungsinformatik der GI
und des Fachbereichs 1 der Informationstechnischen
Gesellschaft im VDE, 2000 (http: / / www.uni-oldenburg.de /
fb3 / lehre / lenk / ) [02 / 07 / 2001].
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Verwaltung im InternetZeitalter, Sigma Rainer Bohn, Berlin, 2000.
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Gronlund
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[12] C. Mok, Designing Business: Multiple Media, Multiple
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[16] R. Traunmuller,
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[17] M. Wimmer, R. Traunmueller, K. Lenk, Electronic business
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