Information Technology Governance in Public Organizations
2 contributors - Paperback
£99.99
Lazar Rusu is a Professor in the Department of Computer and Systems Sciences, Stockholm University, Sweden. His research interests are IT Governance, Business-IT Alignment, and IT Outsourcing, and he has professional experience of over 30 years both industrial and academic in the area of information systems/information technology. He has published his research work in journals such as Computers in Human Behavior, Industrial Management & Data Systems, Information Systems Management, Journal of Global Information Technology Management, Journal of Information Technology Theory and Applications, International Journal of Information Technology and Management, International Journal of IT/Business Alignment and Governance and The Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries, among others. Moreover his research work has been published in the proceedings of top conferences in information systems including in Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. He is author of a number of book chapters published by IGI Global and Springer, co-editor of the book Information Systems, E-Learning, and Knowledge Management Research, Communications in Computer and Information Science, vol. 278 published in 2012 by Springer, and also co-editor of the book entitled Modern Techniques for Successful IT Project Management, published in 2015 by IGI Global. He is associate editor of International Journal of IT/Business Alignment and Governance.
Gianluigi Viscusi is a Research Fellow at the Chair of Corporate Strategy and Innovation (CSI) of the EPFL. His research interests include information systems strategy and planning, business modeling, public policy and technology innovation, e-government, information quality and value, service management and engineering, and social study of information systems. He has been a consultant on e-government planning, policy design, and implementation roadmap for international organizations such as, e.g., the OECD. Currently, his research focuses on three main streams: crowd-driven innovation, social value of open government, and translational research in innovation and technology management. His research has been published in a range of books, conference proceedings, and journals such as, e.g., Government Information Quarterly. In 2010 he has co-authored with Carlo Batini and Massimo Mecella the book Information Systems for eGovernment: A Quality of Service Perspective (Springer, Heidelberg).