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Öğe E-Government Education in Turkish Public Administration Graduate Programs: Past, Present, and Future(NATL ASSOC SCHOOLS PUBLIC AFFAIRS & ADM-NASPAA, 2016) Yildiz, Mete; Babaoglu, Cenay; Demircioglu, Mehmet AkifThe study of e-government is becoming increasingly important around the world in the field of public administration. This article examines the historical development, current status, and future prospects of graduate e-government courses in Turkish public administration programs. To that end, we performed content analysis of e-government course syllabi and evaluated relevant archival documents. We then conducted semistructured surveys of past and current instructors of graduate e-government courses. The article concludes by discussing the future prospects of e-government education in Turkey, including the problems that instructors need to solve in order to improve instruction and the relevance and impact of such courses on students and faculty of public administration programs in Turkey and elsewhere.Öğe Employment of disabled persons in the Turkish public sector: A sector analysis and policy recommendations(Peter Lang AG, 2019) Babaoğlu, Cenay; Yildiz, Mete[No abstract available]Öğe The Role of Communication Technology Diffusion in Government Transformation: The Ottoman Empire Example (1823-1923)(Hacettepe Univ, 2024) Babaoglu, Cenay; Yildiz, Mete; Sadioglu, UgurThis study examines and evaluates the processes of communication technology transfer and adoption during the last century of the Ottoman Empire, 1823-1923. To this end, the adoption processes of four technologies, the postal system, telegraph, telephone, and the printing press, are examined in detail. The objective is to explain the underlying reasons for technology adoption by the government by using a historical perspective. In general, the study's primary purpose is to examine the effect of technology on administrative processes historically. The findings of the study show that these communication technologies were instrumental. First, they connected the Ottoman countryside to the Imperial Capital (Istanbul) for administrative and military purposes, making it easier for the central Ottoman Administration to control the Empire. Second, they were instrumental in integrating the Empire's economy into the global capitalist economy, and along the way, transforming the Ottomans into a de-facto semi-colony. The impact created by these technologies, which were used for administrative centralization provides important lessons for current technological transformation processes.