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University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
The State of the Art in eGovernment Domain Modeling
Κωνσταντίνος Ταραμπάνης (kat@uom.gr)
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Overview
Classifying eGovernment Models
Overview of the models
Presenting our approach
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Three views on e-Government domain modeling
eGovernment domain and service models can be grouped into three categories, depending on their modeling perspective
– Object perspective
– Process perspective
– Holistic perspective
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Object Perspective
Focuses on identifying and modeling the common objects that are shared among a large number of public administration organizations
– The UK Government Common Information Model
– The DIP eGovernment Ontology
– The OneStopGov Life-event ontology model
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Process Perspective
Focuses on modeling generic processes that are common to a large number of public administration organizations
– The SAP Public Sector Solution Map
– The Government Process Classification Scheme
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Holistic Perspective (1/2)
Focuses on combining the object and the process perspective and providing a holistic representation of public administration
– The three spheres in eGovernance
– The Gartner Government Performance Framework
– The ONTOGOV service
– WebDG Ontologies
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
Holistic Perspective (2/2)
– A Faceted Classification of Public Administration and Generic Administrative Processes
– The Federal Enterprise Architecture Ontology
– The Governance Enterprise Architecture
– The FIDIS eGovernment Domain Model
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
The Governance Enterprise Architecture (GEA)
Introduces a consistent set of generic models that model and describe public administration
It is technology-neutral and thus applicable to different technological environments
It has been developed, used and extended in several R&D projects
It has been used by the public agencies of two EU Member States for modelling their services
University of Macedonia
© University of Macedonia
GEA Public Service Model
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