Theorizing E-Governance: A Review of The World Bank’s 3-Stage Model Versus The Model Of Pc Utilization
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Date
2024Author
Adoko, Ketty
Anume, Gloria
Okello, Nelson Mandela
Okullu, Daniel
Anyono, Jenifer
Akidi, Eva
Alemo, Mike
Angwen, Sarah Jenniffer
Abuka, Geoffrey Alex
Were, Andrew
Owera, Francis
Okello, Daniel
Okuna, Victor
Mwesigwa, David
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Over the recent decades, governments, both in the global north and the global south, have been
undergoing and continue to counter several challenges in delivering services to citizens given the everburgeoning
human population interposed with/by escalating community demands as well as rapid
urbanization. A few of these challenges have been addressed through better scientific innovation and
digitization of governance. Even though there are several models through which digital governance can
be executed, in this paper, we have made a comparative review of two models (the World Bank’s 3-
stage model and the PC utilization model) with the view of unpackaging the intricacies involved in each
and how they have been addressed. We have exposed the parallels between the two models with
perceptions drawn from the environments of governments in the global south before presenting
potential interventions. Our central view emerged from our own practical experiences drawn from our
places of work that are largely rural-based, and knowing that, while Uganda boosts of promoting a
comparatively higher number of municipalities to city-status within a short period, the situation in those
cities remains, almost, semi-rural or sub-urban and so, digital governance presents rather unvarying
challenges entwined in ruralism. While we did not present particular cases due to dearth of primary
studies, our arguments can be supportive in guiding the country’s policy makers as they contend with a
pseudo-digital governance phase.
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