ORGANIZING AND MANAGING KNOWLEDGE
FOR e-GOVERNMENT
Issues, Practices and Challenges
Zamira Dzhusupova, Adegboyega Ojo and Tomasz Janowski
Centre for Electronic Governance, United Nations University IIST, P.O. Box 3058, Macao, Macau SAR
Keywords: e-Government, Knowledge Management, Public Administration.
Abstract: Electronic Government requires new approaches to the acquisition, management and distribution of
knowledge in the public organizations to transform public service delivery, enable inter-agency cooperation
and support for complex decision making activities by both middle level and senior level public officers.
This paper explains the need for knowledge management (KM) in government, explores knowledge
management requirements for public organizations in the context of electronic government, and describes
available KM solutions. In addition, the paper presents and analyzes examples of national and international
KM initiatives and characterizes the maturity of current KM practices by governments. The paper concludes
by indicating challenges to public sector KM practice and identifying essential elements of a robust KM
framework for e-government.
1 INTRODUCTION
The capability to gather and generate valuable
knowledge from information is a defining feature of
a modern state (Friis 2002). It is increasingly
understood that KM must be conceived as an
integral element of any e-government initiative that
seeks to enable innovation in government, better
support policy and decision making, and transform
public service delivery through inter-organizational
collaboration among government agencies. Despite
the growing awareness by government, there is yet
to emerge robust KM frameworks to guide public
organizations in their KM practices.
The goal of this paper is highlight some core
knowledge management issues for e-government,
examine current KM practices by government and
international organization and discuss possible
elements of a KM framework for e-government to
address shortfalls identified in the current practices.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows:
Section 2 presents a conceptual framework to
underpin the discussion while the methodology for
the study is presented in Section 3. KM solutions for
the public sector are described in Section 4 while
national and international KM initiatives are
presented in Section 5. Discussions and concluding
remarks are provided in Section 6 and 7 respectively.
2 CONCEPRUAL FRAMEWORK
2.1 KM concepts
There are many definitions of knowledge in the
literature: as “a fluid mix of framed experience,
values, contextual information, expert insight and
grounded intuition that provides an environment of
and framework for evaluating and incorporating new
experience and information” (Davenport and Prusak,
1998); and as “information that changes something
or somebody either by becoming grounds for actions
or by making an individual (or an institution)
capable of different or more effective action
(Drucker, P.,1993).
KM could be defined as the effort to
systematically find, organize and make available a
company’s intellectual capital and to foster a culture
of continuous learning and knowledge sharing so
that organizational activities build on what is already
known (Daft, 2001). According to (Snowden, D.
2000), KM is “the identification, optimization, and
active management of intellectual assets, either in
the form of explicit knowledge held in artifacts or as
tacit knowledge possessed by individuals or
communities”. “Knowledge conversion is about the
interactions between explicit and tacit knowledge in
continuous and spiral manner” (Nonaka, I. &
206
Dzhusupova Z., Ojo A. and Janowski T. (2009).
ORGANIZING AND MANAGING KNOWLEDGE FOR e-GOVERNMENT - Issues, Practices and Challenges .
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing, pages 206-211
DOI: 10.5220/0002313402060211
Copyright
c
SciTePress
Takeuchi, H., 1991).
Major components of a typical KM practice
discussed in the literature are:
1) People – consists of the employee of the
organization whose motivation and ability to use
existing organisational knowledge and share
their own experience and lessons learnt
determine the success of KM initiatives
(Davenport, De Long, Beers, 1998).
2) Process set of activities including organising
and managing knowledge to create, capture,
store, share and utilize (Nona, Takeuchi, 1991,
Alavi and Leiidner, 2001, Becerra-Fernandez,
Gonzalez and Sabherwal’s, 2004, O’dell,
grayson and Essaides, 2003).
3) Technology - specifically IT infrastructure as
primer enabler of successful implementation of
KM projects (Gronlund A., 2002, Zhou Z, 2007,
Yuen, 2007).
4) Sources – include documents, files, databases,
reports within organisations and external
information stocks for explicit knowledge, and
employees for tacit knowledge.
5) Knowledge Repository – the storage for
information and knowledge resources.
6) KM System – a platform equipping managers
with specific tools to create, retrieve store, use
and share knowledge. KM systems and
repositories, as organizational memory systems
(Alavi, M., and Leidner, 1999) make possible to
accumulate, preserve and transfer rapidly and
easily organisational knowledge.
2.2 KM and e-Government
The main objective of e-government is to enable
efficient and effective delivery of public services in
the most accessible and convenient manner for
citizens and business. Different types of services for
various categories of customers such as general
citizenry, taxpayers, pensioners, youth and children,
farmers, entrepreneurs, realtors and visitors, presents
different user knowledge needs. In current e-
government practices, huge amount of information is
available online but the main causes of user
dissatisfaction are out-of-date information, difficult
to find right information and lack of needs
orientation. Consequently, government must develop
commensurate capacity to manage and process the
huge volume of information collected through its
regular interaction with citizens and other
stakeholders. More importantly, it must be able to
exploit the generated knowledge in service delivery
innovation and other core functions or activities of
government.
For internal government activities, e-government
aims to enhance policy and decision making in
different domains – healthcare, education, welfare,
economics, finance, taxation, land management,
defence, culture, foreign and internal affairs,
agriculture, transport and communications which
requires organisation and access to specific
knowledge from different sources.
Complex organizational culture, environment for
isolation in public sector, unwillingness for
collaboration and sharing knowledge among public
workers in e-government activities requires
comprehensive solutions for organising and
managing both explicit knowledge stored in the
agencies and tacit knowledge from civil servants.
3 METHODOLOGY
The objectives of the paper are: (i) to explore KM
requirements for the e-government practice, (ii) to
review cases of national and international KM
initiatives, and (iii) to discuss the major issues
involved in KM practices for e-government.
To achieve these objectives, the paper: identifies
and describes e-government activities requiring KM
support; surveys the state of the art KM solutions;
and maps KM solutions to identified e-government
activities (KM Feature matrix); and analyzing the
presented cases using the feature matrix. Finally, the
current level of KM practice or maturity is assessed.
The cases present two categories – national and
international initiatives. For both categories, we
highlight: (i) major objectives, (ii) solutions applied.
4 KM SOLUTIONS
FOR e-GOVERNMENT
KM can generally support internal workings of
government as well as its relationships with citizens
and other categories of stakeholders – in the area of
service delivery, participatory policy development,
and organizational learning and growth. Specific
KM requirements in these areas include:
R1) Providing access to knowledge for effective
policy formulation accumulated from existing
internal sources.
R2) Supporting decision making activities by
maintaining information on decision patterns,
for instance in cases related to authorization or
certification services.
R3) Enabling effective sharing of experience, ideas
ORGANIZING AND MANAGING KNOWLEDGE FOR e-GOVERNMENT - Issues, Practices and Challenges
207
and know-how among public workers to enable
organisational learning.
R4) Collecting and harnessing citizens’ feedback
and demands to create new knowledge on
services both in contents and delivery.
R5) Ability to harness information provided by
citizens on governmental and non-governmental
platforms as part of public consultation for
policy and decision making.
R6) Analyzing e-service transactions or audit
information as basis for improving service
delivery, for instance through user profiling and
service personalisation.
R7) Analysing good practice, cases and lessons
learnt from other departments within and
outside government to avoid “reinventing
wheel”.
Table 1: KM Feature matrix.
KM
Reqs.
KM Solutions
S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7
R1
9 9
R2
9
9 9
R3
9
9
R4
9
R5
9
9
9 9
R6
9
R7
9
9
In addressing these requirements, KM solutions
spanning various families of technologies have been
developed. Mainstream KM solutions for e-
government include the following:
S1) Web technology, Intranets and Internet portals
- provide on-line access to information and
knowledge within organization and across
organization boundaries.
S2) Knowledge Repositories and Knowledge Bases
- accumulate knowledge from internal and
external sources for collaborative utilization.
S3) Citizen Relationship Management - helps to
better recognize citizen demands, create citizen
profiles, and serve citizens accordingly.
S4) Data Mining – versatile approach to
knowledge discovery and delivery. It allows
the mining of data on interactions between the
government and citizens or business to
improve decision making, service delivery etc.
S5) Content Management systems - help to
overcome problems of information
accessibility by knowledge workers.
S6) Semantic technologies help to solve the
problems of application and data
interoperability, improved search and
discovery capability.
S7) Virtual communities or Community of Practices
- offer interaction and knowledge exchange
platform by capturing experience of multiple
experts and generate new knowledge to meet
the needs of the community.
5 KM INITIATIVES FOR
e-GOVERNMENT – CASES
This section presents an overview of national and
international KM initiatives - presented in Tables 2
and 3 respectively.
6 DISCUSSION
The reviewed cases indicate that current national
KM initiative tend to focus on building KM
capabilities within government and enabling
organizational and employee learning. International
initiatives largely provide repository of good
practices and learning resources for use by
government institutions.
Frequently used KM technologies include
internet, intranet and portal technologies,
knowledge repository, communities and contents
management solutions. Technologies such as data
mining, semantic technologies and customer
relationship management systems are yet to be
adopted in mainstream KM practice.
In addition to technological solutions highlighted
in this paper, organizational and governance issues
are critical to the success of KM initiative in
government. In particular, the following are
considered imperative for successful KM initiative:
strong leadership and awareness in government
agencies; alignment of KM strategy with the main
policy objectives and e-government, and the
existence of Chief Knowledge Officer role in
government for implementation and coordination of
KM initiatives.
Current practice and research in the domain fall
short in the following aspects: lack of research on
methodology and tools for KM strategy
development and models for alignment with e-
government strategy; poor research and lack of case
studies on KM systems to support decision making
and strategic planning for e-government; lack of
guidelines and toolkits for implementation of KM
practices for e-government; shortage of efficient
mechanisms and incentives for knowledge sharing to
ensure cultural and organizational changes.
KMIS 2009 - International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing
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Table 2: Cases - National Initiatives.
Country Objectives Solutions
Australia
Develop KM capability in government:
o KM applications implemented within the Australian
Public Service (APS).
o Case Studies provide tools and techniques for KM
practice in the government agencies and demonstrate
the importance of knowledge to public
organizations and how technology can be used to
support agency performance.
o KM Better Practice Checklist helps agencies
enhance use of knowledge to improve productivity
and service delivery.
o The e-Government Resource Centre provides access
to knowledge on e-government.
o KM case studies stored in the electronic
archive of the Australian Government
Information Management Office (AGIMO)
and published on the portal.
o KM Better Practice Checklist guides
information and knowledge management
within and between agencies and focuses on
non-technical issues.
o The e-Government Resource Centre is the
Victorian Government's repository of e-
government initiatives, strategies, policies,
website standards, best practices and
international research.
Singapore
Build employee capacity and enable organizational
learning
o KM in the public service is linked with the e-
Government strategy and action plans.
o Government KM portal enabled employees to build
capacity on each other's knowledge and create better
documentation of procedure.
o Repository intended to minimize re-work, shorten
the learning curve for employees and ensure
consistency in advice provided to customers and
raise productivity.
o Documentation of processes and capturing of
project lessons upon completion of projects.
o Developing, refining and updating materials
on-line, supported by a KM process and
content management strategy.
o Repository of past work and experience for
enterprise knowledge sharing.
o Portal to transfer best practices, tools and
resources with industry partners, players and
customers.
Korea
Underpin government transformation:
o Integrated Government KM System enables inter-
government knowledge sharing and discussion
aiming at sharing diverse policy information through
e-document management and government work, and
coordinating support for efficient decision-making
o KM system enables various ideas and knowledge
proposed in the process of policy-making to be
recorded and managed.
o The demands of the people analyzed and examined
from various perspectives, and used in policy
development and service delivery.
o Government KM system connects the KM
system and On-nara BPS of each agency
through the Government Knowledge
Management Center.
o Operation manuals, ordinance information,
research data, policy related information,
statistics and training information can also be
searched and utilized within the system.
o The system allows real-time accumulation of
core business knowledge, sharing and
utilization of operations-based administrative
knowledge and major policies and services of
other agencies throughout the government
United
Kingdom
Enable knowledge sharing among departments:
o Knowledge Network (KN) allows officials in all
government departments to share knowledge with
each other and work online with colleagues across
government.
o Knowledge resources for local government explains
the benefits of KM for local government, key steps
and considerations in developing KM strategy in
public sector organization.
o Knowledge Network (KN) provides a cross-
government communications infrastructure
for secure access to 40 dedicated KM
applications, discussion forums, web-based
community sites, integrated workflow
applications and knowledge pools.
o Knowledge recourses related to local
government are available from the portal of
Improvement and Development Agency for
local government
United
States of
America
Develop KM capability for federal agencies:
o Aim is to transfer KM concepts, principles,
standards, practices, processes, strategies, and
technologies across the Federal Government.
o Federal defence-related agencies- Navy, Department
of Defence, Army and Air Force and civilian
organizations - General Services Administration,
Environmental Protection Agency and National
Aeronautics and Space Administration are most
active in KM.
o Government's Chief Knowledge Officer
(CKO) appointed the General Services
Administration (GSA) since 1999.
o Federal Knowledge Management Working
Group under the Federal Chief Information
Officers Council (CIO Council) is an
interagency body.
o Portals, content and document management,
and collaboration systems.
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Table 3: Cases – International Initiatives.
Organization Objectives Solutions
European
Union
Enabling knowledge exchange:
o Innovative KM Infrastructures within
European Public Administration (KIWI)
aims to enhance e-Governance through
utilization of KM methodology in the public
sector and fits with eEurope program.
o E-Governance Enhancement via Knowledge
Management (EG2KM) project enables
project participants to learn and exchange
technological knowhow and experience
from successful European initiatives
through adaptation in the context of
Malaysia to enhance e-governance.
o Web-based and mobile-accessible platform for
acquisition, integration, analysis and sharing of
distributed information and knowledge in
multimedia formats, overcoming the problems
caused by the complex communication and
workflow processes that exist within and between
government departments.
o Within the EG2KM project KM software for public
administrators and KM Best Practices Training
Tool Kit were developed based on the working
model of European best practices, inclusive of
measures, management tools, training and
education components.
United
Nations
Department
of Economic
and Social
Affairs
(UNDESA)
Provisioning knowledge repository for e- and
m-government initiatives:
o United Nations Public Administration
Network (UNPAN) was developed and
managed by the Division for Public
Administration and Development
Management in partnership with relevant
international and regional institutions.
o The United Nations E-Government
Readiness Knowledge Base (UNKB) is a
benchmarking tool for research and analysis
on the state of e-Government.
o The UNKB allows users to easily access,
view, sort and print information from the
UN e-government readiness database.
o Global Knowledge Repository for
Electronic/Mobile Government (EMGKR)
aimed to promote knowledge management,
sharing and collaboration to deliver better
services to their citizens.
o UNPAN is a compendium of e-Government
practices available at the portal contains cases of
innovative e-Government applications from all
geographical regions of the world, with a special
emphasis on those that are adaptable and replicable
by other countries.
o e-Learning initiative Online Training Centre
within UNPAN provides for government officials
from all over the world access to various on-line
courses and learning materials on e-government
and knowledge management in public
organizations.
o EMGKR contains e-government Surveys,
Innovative Practices, ICT Applications,
Documents, News, Events, Directories, Training
and Tools, Thematic Websites, National Policies
and Strategies, Implementation Plans, Legal and
Regulatory Framework, ICT Infrastructure,
Institutional and human resources building,
Monitoring and Evaluation.
United
Nations
University
(UNU)
Cultivating a global Community of Practice
for e-governance
o UNeGov.net Community of Practice
network for e-Governance aims to share
experiences between experts and
practitioners in e-governance from different
countries and regions around the globe.,
develop human capacity, transfer skills and
knowledge.
o Portal developed based on semantic web
technologies provides technical support for
collaborative problem-solving by offering rich
collection of web-based resources - publications,
projects, software, projects, people, organizations,
problem descriptions, solutions for problems.
World Bank
Provisioning knowledge repository on e-
Government:
o KM initiatives aimed to expand knowledge
sharing and help e-Government researchers
and practitioners to build their capacities for
acquiring and applying knowledge relevant
to their core development goals and
communicating online.
o Knowledge repository on e-Government developed
within the InfoDev contains knowledge resources
related to e-Government from various international,
government and non-government organizations
including surveys, strategies, guidelines, toolkits
and case studies
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7 CONCLUSIONS
This paper argues for the need of KM practices as
part of e-governance initiatives. While there are
growing KM solutions in government organizations,
improvement of these practices can only be achieved
through a KM framework for e-government which
addresses beyond technological issues,
organizational and governance challenges.
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