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How Democratic Will E-Democracy Be?
Edinburgh, Scotland July 26-July 28
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/COMPSAC.2005.8529th Annual International Computer So ...
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Stuart Anderson, University of Edinburgh
Massimo Felici, University of Edinburgh
Recent developments (e.g., e-Government, e-Democracy, e-Voting, etc.) of the Information Society expose the limits of system security. The ubiquitousness of Information Technology relies on stringent system requirements. Although new technology addresses technical problems and provides new challenges, new technology often gives rise to new hazards. In order to identify mitigation actions, it is necessary to understand diverse multidisciplinary aspects. The complexity and multidisciplinary of Information Technology require us to investigate new mechanisms that address general requirements (e.g., Trust, Security, etc.). A debate on the problems arising in particular Information Society scenarios would benefit from a broad multidisciplinary audience. This panel advocates a multidisciplinary debate on e-Democracy: How democratic will e-Democracy be?
Citation:
Stuart Anderson, Massimo Felici, "How Democratic Will E-Democracy Be?," compsac, vol. 1, pp.499, 29th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference (COMPSAC'05) Volume 1, 2005
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