Volume 07, Issue 05
Frequency: 12 Issue per year
Paper Submission: Throughout the Month
Acceptance Notification: Within 2 days
Areas Covered: Multidisciplinary
Accepted Language: Multiple Languages
Journal Type: Online (e-Journal)
ISSN Number:
2582-8568
Driven by advancements in the area of information and communication technologies (ICT), the rise of digital democracy indicates a revolutionary shift in the association between governments and citizens. By fostering transparency, flexibility, and ongoing involvement within planning and social service execution, e-governance instruments have radically altered public engagement. The findings of this research investigate precisely how, in numerous political structures, digital resources are bettering electoral procedures, eliminating bureaucracy hurdles, and expanding civic duty. The study monitored determining if efforts to digitize government improve participatory governance using a qualitative approach driven by additional knowledge, across borders case studies, and policy interpretation. The outcomes illustrate that although electronic government methods significantly boost citizen trust, fiscal responsibility, and service effectiveness, they additionally deal with vulnerabilities in the field of cybersecurity, digital marginalization, and data discretion. The analysis discovers a finding that the use of digital democracy may constitute an essential component for successful administration in the 21st century since it is executed progressively.
Public Engagement, ICT, Data Discretion, Policy Interpretation, E-Governance Instruments, Digital Marginalization