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Monday, 1.07.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001
313.495 million rubles from the republican budget of Dagestan will be spent for the public health sector modernization in Dagestan on the part of implementation of the program "Introduction of modern information systems in the public health care system". 170.519 million rubles will be allocated to computerize medical institutions working with children.

The total volume of funding allocated for the modern information systems introduction programs in Dagestan amounts to: in 2011 - 153 627 000 rubles; in 2012 - 159 867 000 rubles.

Read more: RU: 300 million rubles to be spent for public health sector informatization in Dagestan

The demand for Russian communication and information technologies is growing worldwide. At the international telecommunications exposition Telecom World-2011, held in Geneva, Switzerland, between the 24 and the 27 October, Russian manufacturers did not only got a rave reception from the audience, but signed some hefty contracts.

The Russian part of the exposition featured technologies that allow to access media content of any kind. Using these gadgets, one can make phone calls, get pictures from TV broadcasting and pay bills. This multi-functional device has no analogues in the world, says spokesperson for the Ministry of Communications Elena Lashkina.

Read more: RU: E-government for export

The Kremlin Has Launched One-Stop Shops on the Internet to Improve Public Services Delivery to Russian Citizens and Curb Its Own Bloated Bureaucracy

Russia’s long-awaited electronic government kicked off on Saturday, amid muted concerns that a weekday deployment could expose the networked system to floods of requests or trigger a database shutdown. Billed as a new anti-corruption frontline against Russia's unwieldy bureaucracy, the new system will also help Russia’s 65 million Internet users to enjoy basic public services without so much as leaving their comfort zones.

Read more: RU: Waging Cyber War on Bureacracy

Russia’s infamous red tape is getting thinner, and some plus points of a new law regulating state agencies’ demands can be tried out already.

State agencies will have to collect all information needed for requested documents themselves – freeing people from endless visits to various departments and hours of queuing, a common feature across the country.

The long awaited changes, however, are not coming all at once. Federal agencies are to start using the system first, and the regional authorities are to join them on July 1 next year.

Read more: RU: The end of the bureaucratic nightmare?

A €2 million EU-funded project aiming to increase administrative efficiency and improve access to government electronic services for Russian citizens has come to an end, according to a press release from the Delegation of the European Union to Russia.

The “Support to e-Government in the Russian Federation – Government-to-citizens electronic services” project ran for 27 months and was designed to support the government’s various initiatives to promote e-Government as a primary instrument in the reform of public administration in the Russian Federation.

Read more: EU and Russia complete €2 million e-government project

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