The eJournal of eDemocracy and Open Government (JeDEM) provides researchers and practitioners the opportunity to advance the practice and understanding of eDemocracy, eGovernment, eParticipation. The journal aims to bridge innovative, insightful and stimulating research, testing and findings with practice and the work conducted by governments, NPOs, NGOs and professionals. Given the different backgrounds of the editors, JeDEM encourages articles which come from different disciplines or adopt an interdisciplinary approach, including eVoting, ePolitics, eSociety, business IT, applied computer gaming and simulation, cyberpsychology, usability, decision sciences, marketing, economics, psychology, sociology, media studies, communication studies, political science, philosophy, law, policy, legislation, and ethics. JeDEM provides up-to-date articles with ideas to be discussed, used and implemented, whilst at the same time also being a repository of knowledge.
JeDEM publishes ongoing and completed research, case studies and project descriptions that are selected after a rigorous blind review by experts in the field.
JeDEM is indexed with EBSCO, DOAJ, Google scholar, and the Public Knowledge Project metadata harvester.
This issue presents updated and extended papers from the CEDEM11 and CEDEM12 (Conference on eDemocracy and Open Government held in 2011 and 2012) based on the best reviewer scores as well as extended versions of some keynotes' papers.
| Editorial JeDEM 4(2), 2012 |
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Noella Edelmann, Peter Parycek |
v-vi |
| Determining Citizens’ Opinions About Stories in the News Media |
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Timo Wandhöfer, Steve Taylor, Paul Walland, Ruxandra Geana, Robert Weichselbaum, Miriam Fernandez, Sergej Sizov |
198-221 |