Shannon H. Schelin is a doctoral student in public administration at North Carolina State University. In addition, she is an E-Government Research Associate at the University of North Carolina’s School of Government. Shannon has published several book chapters and articles, including “E-Government: An Overview” in Public Information Technology: Policy and Management Issues (2002), “Training for Digital Government” in Digital Government: Principles and Practices (2003), co-authored “E-Government” in The Internet Encyclopedia (forthcoming), “Residual Sum of Squares” in Encyclopedia of Social Science Research Methods (forthcoming), and co-authored “Analyzing Information Technology Investments in State Government” in Social Science Computer Review (forthcoming). Shannon has been selected for membership in Phi Kappa Phi, a national honor society for academic excellence, as well as Pi Alpha Alpha, a national honor society for public affairs and public administration. She teaches courses in American Government and State and Local Government at North Carolina State University.
G. David Garson is a full professor of public administration at North Carolina State University, where he teaches courses on American government, research methodology, computer applications, and geographic information systems. He was the recipient of the Donald Campbell Award (1995) from the policy studies organization, American Political Science Association, for outstanding contributions to policy research methodology and of the Aaron Wildavsky Book Award (1997) from the same organization. He is the author of Guide to Writing Quantitative Papers, Theses, and Dissertations (Dekker, 2001), Neural Network Analysis for Social Scientists (1998), and Computer Technology and Social Issues (1995). In addition he is editor of Social Dimensions of Information Technology (2000), Information Technology and Computer Applications in Public Administration: Issues and Trends (1999), and the Handbook of Public Information Systems (1999). He has also authored or edited 17 other books and authored more than 50 articles. For the last 20 years he has served as editor of the Social Science Computer Review and is on the editorial board of four additional journals. [Editor]