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Nitham Hindi

Researcher at Qatar University

Publications -  40
Citations -  744

Nitham Hindi is an academic researcher from Qatar University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Higher education & Service (business). The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 39 publications receiving 545 citations. Previous affiliations of Nitham Hindi include Emporia State University & Texas State University.

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E-government implementation: A bird's eye view of issues relating to costs, opportunities, benefits and risks

TL;DR: The aim of this research is to help governments to better analyse the impact of costs, opportunities, benefits and risks on the success of e-government systems and its pre-adoption from an implementation perspective.
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Identifying the trends and impact of graduate attributes on employability: a literature review

TL;DR: A total of 39 relevant studies on graduate skills and attributes in the subject areas of business and management, accounting, and computer science were extracted from Scopus® (database) and Australia emerged as the most active country in researching the domain.
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Blockchain for next generation services in banking and finance: cost, benefit, risk and opportunity analysis

TL;DR: There are limited contributions in utilising blockchain in the banking and finance sectors when compared with other sectors, and the study highlighted the relevant perspective of benefits, opportunities, costs and risks within such sectors.
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An analysis of methodologies utilised in e-government research: A user satisfaction perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, a profiling approach is employed to analyse 114 (out of 3,934 from 2000 to 2012) eGovernment publications (with specific focus on user satisfaction) including examining variables such as country of research, sample size, type(s) of respondents, data collection methods, and statistical tools and techniques employed.
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Are U.K. Citizens Satisfied With E-Government Services? Identifying and Testing Antecedents of Satisfaction

TL;DR: The empirical outcomes show the five factors identified in this study have a significant impact on U.K. citizens’ satisfaction with e-government services.