TY - JOUR
T1 - Advancing Public Trust Relationships in Electronic Government
T2 - The Singapore E-Filing Journey
AU - Lim, Eric T. K.
AU - Tan, Chee-Wee
AU - Cyr, Dianne
AU - Pan, Shan L.
AU - Xiao, Bo
PY - 2012/12
Y1 - 2012/12
N2 - E-governments have become an increasingly integral part of the virtual economic landscape. However, e-government systems have been plagued by an unsatisfactory, or even a decreasing, level of trust among citizen users. The political exclusivity and longstanding bureaucracy of governmental institutions have amplified the level of difficulty in gaining citizens' acceptance of e-government systems. Through the synthesis of trust-building processes with trust relational forms, we construct a multidimensional, integrated analytical framework to guide our investigation of how e-government systems can be structured to restore trust in citizen-government relationships. Specifically, the analytical framework identifies trust-building strategies (calculative-based, prediction-based, intentionality-based, capability-based, and transference-based trust) to be enacted for restoring public trust via e-government systems. Applying the analytical framework to the case of Singapore's Electronic Tax-Filing (E-Filing) system, we advance an e-government developmental model that yields both developmental prescriptions and technological specifications for the realization of these trust-building strategies. Further, we highlight the impact of sociopolitical climates on the speed of e-government maturity.
AB - E-governments have become an increasingly integral part of the virtual economic landscape. However, e-government systems have been plagued by an unsatisfactory, or even a decreasing, level of trust among citizen users. The political exclusivity and longstanding bureaucracy of governmental institutions have amplified the level of difficulty in gaining citizens' acceptance of e-government systems. Through the synthesis of trust-building processes with trust relational forms, we construct a multidimensional, integrated analytical framework to guide our investigation of how e-government systems can be structured to restore trust in citizen-government relationships. Specifically, the analytical framework identifies trust-building strategies (calculative-based, prediction-based, intentionality-based, capability-based, and transference-based trust) to be enacted for restoring public trust via e-government systems. Applying the analytical framework to the case of Singapore's Electronic Tax-Filing (E-Filing) system, we advance an e-government developmental model that yields both developmental prescriptions and technological specifications for the realization of these trust-building strategies. Further, we highlight the impact of sociopolitical climates on the speed of e-government maturity.
KW - e-government
KW - public trust
KW - calculative-based trust
KW - prediction-based trust
KW - intentionality-based trust
KW - capability-based trust
KW - transference-based trust
KW - INFORMATION-SYSTEMS
KW - CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
KW - CASE TOOLS
KW - SERVICES
KW - ADOPTION
KW - PERSPECTIVE
KW - EXPERIENCES
KW - STRATEGIES
KW - DESIGN
KW - IMPACT
U2 - 10.1287/isre.1110.0386
DO - 10.1287/isre.1110.0386
M3 - Article
SN - 1047-7047
VL - 23
SP - 1110
EP - 1130
JO - Information Systems Research
JF - Information Systems Research
IS - 4
ER -