The Role of Regulatory Frameworks in Shaping E- Governance: Insights from Selected Case Studies
As digital transformation accelerates globally, the quality of national regulatory frameworks has become a key determinant of effective e-governance. This paper investigates how regulatory maturity influences the development and implementation of digital government initiatives across eight countries. It introduces a three-tier classification: advanced, moderate, and early-stage, based on the scope of legal frameworks, operationalisation of digital enablers, and integration into public service delivery. Countries such as Belgium, Estonia, and Singapore demonstrate that coherent and enforceable legal ecosystems when paired with institutional coordination and technical infrastructure, achieve high digital governance performance. By contrast, fragmented frameworks constrain implementation and trust. Using cross-case comparison and internationally recognised indices (e.g., EGDI, OSI, EPI, GCI), the study validates this classification and identifies recurring barriers such as regulatory lag, institutional misalignment, operational and infrastructure gaps, and societal mistrust. The findings confirm that while legal maturity is foundational, institutional capacity, technical readiness, and public engagement are critical for inclusive and resilient digital transformation.
Keywords: Digital governance, E-Governance, Regulatory Maturity, Legal Framework, Digital Transformation
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