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Acceptance and leadership-hegemonies of e-commerce policy perspectives

journal contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by B Corbitt, T Thanasankit
This paper presents an analysis of the e-Commerce policies developed and implemented in the USA, Canada, Australia, Victoria, Finland, Norway, the UK, Ireland, the EU (by the OECD), Singapore, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand and Hong Kong (Special Administrative Region). The paper shows that e-Commerce policy adopted is generally trying to achieve two fundamental aims:<br><br>1. to minimize regulatory environments for e-Commerce; and<br>2. to ease logistical problems in doing e-Commerce—i.e. in paying electronically, in deliver y of goods and in customs, tariffs and duties.<br><br>These strategies are designed to create an environment where e-Commerce is adopted by business and government in these countries to achieve ‘best practice’, to become ‘modern’, to gain ‘efficiencies’, because ‘it is the way to go’, because ‘we must have it, because everybody has it’, and because they ‘perceive the benefits of it’. In essence it is being used to gain hegemony in the economic competitiveness of the geopolitical environment created by the Internet. This paper argues that differentiating types of policy is related to ideology and hegemony in the various countries.<br>

History

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Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Language

eng

Notes

School of Information Systems

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, Taylor & Francis Ltd.

Journal

Prometheus

Volume

20

Pagination

39-57

ISSN

0810-9028

eISSN

1470-1030

Issue

1

Publisher

Routledge

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