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Public IT Policies in Less Developed Countries: A Critical Assessment of the Literature and a Reference Framework

Public IT Policies in Less Developed Countries: A Critical Assessment of the Literature and a... AbstractHow well do extant difwion models originating in developed countries explain adoption of information technologies in less developed countries? m a t is the current status of the literature with respect to public ITpolicies? The authors explore the literature on public ITpolicies to answer these questions. Findings indicate that, due to diferences in environmental factors, existing models may not be readily applicable to less developed countries without careful consideration of the structural differences between developed countries -where most models originated- and less developed countries. Within extant studies of public IT policies, this article identifies typical research characteristics - e.g., case study methodologies, single country selection, single project scope, and little theory development. Finally, an integrative framework for the rationalization of existing models is proposed. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Global Information Technology Management Taylor & Francis

Public IT Policies in Less Developed Countries: A Critical Assessment of the Literature and a Reference Framework

Public IT Policies in Less Developed Countries: A Critical Assessment of the Literature and a Reference Framework

Journal of Global Information Technology Management , Volume 6 (4): 20 – Oct 1, 2003

Abstract

AbstractHow well do extant difwion models originating in developed countries explain adoption of information technologies in less developed countries? m a t is the current status of the literature with respect to public ITpolicies? The authors explore the literature on public ITpolicies to answer these questions. Findings indicate that, due to diferences in environmental factors, existing models may not be readily applicable to less developed countries without careful consideration of the structural differences between developed countries -where most models originated- and less developed countries. Within extant studies of public IT policies, this article identifies typical research characteristics - e.g., case study methodologies, single country selection, single project scope, and little theory development. Finally, an integrative framework for the rationalization of existing models is proposed.

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References (50)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis
ISSN
2333-6846
eISSN
1097-198X
DOI
10.1080/1097198X.2003.10856360
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractHow well do extant difwion models originating in developed countries explain adoption of information technologies in less developed countries? m a t is the current status of the literature with respect to public ITpolicies? The authors explore the literature on public ITpolicies to answer these questions. Findings indicate that, due to diferences in environmental factors, existing models may not be readily applicable to less developed countries without careful consideration of the structural differences between developed countries -where most models originated- and less developed countries. Within extant studies of public IT policies, this article identifies typical research characteristics - e.g., case study methodologies, single country selection, single project scope, and little theory development. Finally, an integrative framework for the rationalization of existing models is proposed.

Journal

Journal of Global Information Technology ManagementTaylor & Francis

Published: Oct 1, 2003

Keywords: Public IT Policy; Less Developed Countries; Least Developed Countries; Diffusion Models; IT Policy Framework; IT Policy Impact

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