@conference{alexopoulos2018blockchain,
title = {BlockChain Technologies in Government 3.0: A Review},
author = {Charalampos Alexopoulos and Aggeliki Androutsopoulou and Zoi Lachana and Michalis Avgerinos Loutsaris and Yannis Charalabidis},
url = {http://depts.washington.edu/egcdep18/documents/Virkar_et_al_2018.pdf#page=25},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-09-04},
journal = {EGOV-CeDEM-ePart 2018},
pages = {11},
abstract = {Government 3.0 is characterised by the utilisation of disruptive technologies in conjunction with already established ones towards data-intensive decision- and policy-making. One of the disruptive technologies that will affect in general e-government applications and services provided and will more specifically frame government 3.0, is BCT. Yet no systematic research is available which compares the benefits of BCT with the barriers to its adoption. This paper conducts a literature review, research projects and applications review for the BCT within the respecting area of e-government. The inquiry follows a desk-based methodology for the identification of the primary references and research projects as well as a qualitative discussion with experts of the domain. This study identifies the major benefits and impediments for the application of this technology in the e-government domain. The findings show that a gap exists between the promised benefits and barriers and frame future research directions.},
keywords = {blockchain technologies, government 3.0, policy-making},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {conference}
}
Government 3.0 is characterised by the utilisation of disruptive technologies in conjunction with already established ones towards data-intensive decision- and policy-making. One of the disruptive technologies that will affect in general e-government applications and services provided and will more specifically frame government 3.0, is BCT. Yet no systematic research is available which compares the benefits of BCT with the barriers to its adoption. This paper conducts a literature review, research projects and applications review for the BCT within the respecting area of e-government. The inquiry follows a desk-based methodology for the identification of the primary references and research projects as well as a qualitative discussion with experts of the domain. This study identifies the major benefits and impediments for the application of this technology in the e-government domain. The findings show that a gap exists between the promised benefits and barriers and frame future research directions.