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  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>author or co-author of articles in prestigious international journals in Public Administration</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Understanding the Role of Intermediaries in Digital Government: The Case of Immigration Services</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Luz Maria Garcia-Garcia</string-name>
          <email>luz2g@yahoo.com.mx</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>J. Ramon Gil-Garcia</string-name>
          <email>jgil-garcia@ctg.albany.edu</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>University of Sierra Sur</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>Oaxaca</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="MX">Mexico</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <fpage>205</fpage>
      <lpage>214</lpage>
      <abstract>
        <p>Digital government intermediaries is not a new topic and has been previously analyzed and documented in the literature. There is also a recognition of an evolution in the study of this concept towards open data intermediaries or infomediaries and, in fact, there are many more studies devoted to this more specific topic. However, there are still outstanding issues to be explored with respect to intermediaries in digital government, particularly in certain policy domains and specific services and programs. This study focuses on intermediaries that help users to obtain migration services. Immigrants can be considered a vulnerable population, given that they are not citizens and need to deal with government agencies from a different country and, sometimes, they are also required to do so in a different language and with certain technical skills that they do not possess. This is why they frequently turn to intermediaries. Based on semistructured interviews with migration intermediaries such as consulates of Central American countries, NGOs, Mexican government offices, and internet café owners; this ongoing research paper focuses on online services for Central American immigrants in Mexico's southern border and analyzes the role of intermediaries. The results show that there are some similarities in terms of the role of intermediaries in digital government in general, but there are also some particularities of migration services.</p>
      </abstract>
      <kwd-group>
        <kwd>Intermediaries</kwd>
        <kwd>consulates</kwd>
        <kwd>NGOs</kwd>
        <kwd>immigrants</kwd>
        <kwd>non-citizens</kwd>
        <kwd>migration services</kwd>
        <kwd>digital government services</kwd>
      </kwd-group>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>1. Introduction</title>
      <p>
        Recently, the concept of intermediaries in the context of digital government, and particularly in
connection with open government, has been extensively studied
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref14 ref16 ref24">(Van Schalkwyk, 2015; Yoon et al.
2018; Kassen, 2018; Janssen &amp; Klievink, 2008)</xref>
        . This is due to the importance of intermediaries and
the role they play in bringing government programs and services closer to citizens as well as
democratizing access to the technological infrastructure of government
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref19">(Van Schalkwyk et al., 2016)</xref>
        .
However, studies on migration management are few and therefore the issue of intermediaries in
immigration services is also pending. The concept of intermediaries previously discussed in
egovernment studies has considered NGOs, religious associations or groups, and government offices
(Sein, 2011), but no organizations more specific to migration services such as consulates. So far, the
intermediaries working with migrants, foreigners who wish to follow a process or obtain a service
from a government from another country, have not been reviewed.
      </p>
      <p>The purpose of this article is to analyze the role of migration service intermediaries by
recognizing the differences and similarities with other online service intermediaries and also the
particularities that this type of intermediation implies. From the analysis of the use of online services
for migrants, it was observed that users require the help of public and private organizations to carry
out the immigration regularization procedure. Immigration services are mostly requested by
migrants from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador who have entered Mexico irregularly, i.e.
without immigration documents. Given their status as irregular, they have not established a
relationship with the government for fear of deportation. Migrants wish to regularize their stay
status by obtaining a temporary resident permit. This procedure is carried out in the offices of the
National Migration Institute (NMI) in the city of Tapachula, state of Chiapas, Mexico. The procedure
is initiated online by means of a
preand, finally, the last steps are carried out in</p>
      <p>This paper is organized in five sections, including the foregoing introduction. Section two
provides the results of our review of the existing literature, focusing on the role of intermediaries in
digital government, the importance of the digital divide, and the characteristics of immigration
services users. Section three briefly describes the research design and methods used in this study.
Section four presents preliminary results which highlight aspects and characteristics of
intermediaries in immigration services. Section five provides some final comments and suggests
ideas for future research about this topic.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>2. Literature Review</title>
      <p>This section presents the results of our review of the existing literature. First, a brief presentation of
the concept of intermediaries in general and also the ones devoted to digital government and data,
who these intermediaries are, and the different roles they play. Second, the concept of digital divide
is revised as it could be considered as one of the main reason why digital government intermediaries
exist. Users of immigration services are also discussed, since it is considered necessary to make a
including but not limited to the digital divide.
2.1.</p>
      <sec id="sec-2-1">
        <title>Digital Government Intermediaries</title>
        <p>
          In the digital government literature, the concept of intermediaries has been used to analyze the
relationship between government and users, which is mediated by a third party. Intermediaries are
defined as "any organization that mediates the relationship between two or more actors"
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref2">(Van der
Muelen quoted in Arendsen &amp; Hedde, 2009)</xref>
          . Some of the first uses of this concept were in the context
of e-commerce. It was initially considered that by moving from traditional commerce to e-commerce,
intermediaries would disappear, as each person would find what he or she was looking for directly.
However, the roles played by intermediaries are maintained in many instances, even in electronic
media
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref3">(Baiey &amp; Bakos, 1997)</xref>
          .
        </p>
        <p>
          These roles played by traditional intermediaries are: 1) bringing together buyers and sellers of
products to achieve economies of scale and reduce the asymmetry of negotiations; 2) protecting
buyers and sellers from the opportunistic conduct of other market participants, becoming a trusted
agent; 3) facilitating the market by reducing operating costs; and 4) locating the appropriate buyer
with the appropriate seller (matching buyers and sellers)
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref3">(Bailey &amp; Bakos, 1997)</xref>
          . These behaviors
have originally been studied from economic theory. Intermediaries are an important part of
reducing transaction costs and generating some advantages. These roles have been transferred to
egovernment intermediaries for some authors
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref14 ref2">(Janssen &amp; Klievink, 2008; Arendsen &amp; Hedde, 2009)</xref>
          ,
which are described as follows: 1) uniting demand with supply; 2) gathering information; 3)
providing trust; and 4) facilitating operations by providing organizational infrastructure.
        </p>
        <p>
          As for Sein (2011), intermediaries are classified into four types depending on the role they play,
1) facilitating intermediaries, those that only provide physical access such as computers and the
internet, they are usually Internet cafés; 2) direct intermediaries, they facilitate the use of online
services or digital government information and these can be NGOs, local organizations, or citizens;
3) enabling intermediaries, it is the combination of the previous roles, they provide physical access
and facilitate the use of services; 4) transforming intermediaries, those that support groups of
disadvantaged citizens, act as activists. Studies on intermediaries come from developed and
underdeveloped countries. Some of the work that has studied the case of intermediaries in a
developed country such as the Netherlands.
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref14">Janssen &amp; Klievink (2008)</xref>
          point out that intermediaries
can be employed to reduce costs and, at the same time, make e-government demand-oriented.
Intermediaries, by being closer to users, facilitate the provision of services. In some cases, the
government itself has decided to introduce private organizations to function as intermediaries, as in
the case of Saudi Arabia, where significant benefits have been found from intermediaries' help to
citizens who do not have the skills or access to computers to adopt digital government
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref23">(Weerakkody,
El-Haddadeh, Al-Sobhi, Akhet &amp; Dwivedi, 2013)</xref>
          .
        </p>
        <p>
          In this regard, the literature on intermediaries notes that it is important to study their role in
digital government projects in developing countries (Sein, 2011), where intermediaries could be
considered to be just as important as the government and citizens. These intermediaries are usually
internet cafés, NGOs, socio-religious organizations, private companies, and even other government
agencies (Sein, 2011). All of them provide Internet access and also offer support to the citizens to use
the services and information offered by government.
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref7">Dombrowski (2014)</xref>
          and
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref1">AlSobhi, Muhammad
&amp; Weerakkody (2009</xref>
          ) mention that intermediaries are not typical end users but that they use digital
government for their customers.
        </p>
        <p>
          The importance of intermediaries is recognized by pointing out that the use of intermediary
organizations cannot be easily replaced or internalized through direct interactions. The government
should seek a strategy in which all types of intermediaries are used to interact with citizens and
businesses
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref14">(Janssen &amp; Klievink, 2008)</xref>
          . More recently, intermediation services went from online
services to focus on the intermediation of open data or infomediaries. These intermediaries are
usually computer programmers, designers, coders, testers, e-government enthusiasts, and even
technically savvy citizens
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref16">(Kassen, 2018)</xref>
          ; that is, those who have the capabilities and skills to reuse
and add value to datasets that the government makes available to citizens. The concept of
intermediaries has been widely used in the context of open data, because in this topic, most of the
datasets the government provide to citizens are often non-processed information and the majority
of the population does not possess skills to reuse or analyze that information
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref16">(Kassen, 2018)</xref>
          .
        </p>
        <p>
          Intermediaries can be a significant part of removing existing barriers while unlocking the
potential of data for all, particularly for communities with limited human or financial resources,
limited access to existing data infrastructures, and underserved populations
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref24">(Yoon et al., 2018)</xref>
          . Some
of these barriers for users are lack of access, low levels of data literacy, and lack of human, social and
financial capital to effectively use open data (Van Schalkwyk, 2015). For Van Schalkwyk et al. (2016)
intermediaries play a number of important roles (i) they increase the accessibility and utility of data;
potential to democratize the impacts and use of open data, which is very similar to the roles that
intermediaries originally had in the context of e-commerce and e-government services.
2.2.
        </p>
      </sec>
      <sec id="sec-2-2">
        <title>Users of Immigration Services and the Digital Divide</title>
        <p>
          Environmental variables have been identified as important for Internet access and use
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref13">(Helbig,
GilGarcia &amp; Ferro, 2009)</xref>
          . We argue that the environment clearly affects how individuals use online
government services, particularly the digital divide. For some authors
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref4">(Belanger &amp; Carter, 2009)</xref>
          there are two variables that are important for the digital divide at the individual level: material
access and usability. The experience of users about these two aspects is influenced by their social
and demographic characteristics. Some of these characteristics are ethnicity, age, gender, education,
and income
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref11">(Gil-Garcia, Helbig &amp; Ferro, 2006)</xref>
          .
        </p>
        <p>
          Many e-government studies have focused on demand needs and specific conditions of users. One
of the main aspects being studied is how much these services really respond to the needs of users
and adapt to their specific conditions
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref18 ref5">(Bertot, Jeager &amp; McClure, 2008; Gauld, Goldfinch &amp; Horsburg,
2009; Reddick, 2005; Moon &amp; Welch, 2005)</xref>
          . In addition, these studies also review the impact of the
digital divide on the use of e-government services
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref11 ref13 ref15 ref17 ref18 ref4 ref5 ref6">(Reddick, 2005; Bertot, Jeager &amp; McClure, 2008;
Helbig, Gil-Garcia &amp; Ferro, 2009; Jeager &amp; Bertot 2010; Norris, 2001; DiMaggio &amp; Hargittai, 2001;
Gil-Garcia, Helbig &amp; Ferro, 2006; Belanger &amp; Carter, 2009)</xref>
          . While there are many issues studied in
terms of demand, few studies have considered migrants as the main users. Some examples are
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref21 ref22">Wang
&amp; Che (2012)</xref>
          and
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref21 ref22">Wang &amp; Gu, (2012)</xref>
          , who describe how Chinese citizens migrating from the
countryside to the city face a lack of skills when using government online services, due to the digital
divide. However, their legal and social status is different from that of international migrants. In fact,
internal migrants are by definition citizens of the same country.
        </p>
        <p>
          Unlike the studies mentioned above, the current study focus on non-citizens. Therefore, the
citizen-oriented theory does not match the concept of foreign users, as many of the benefits that a
citizen would get from e-government are not accessible to non-citizen users. These include
improving the relationship between government and citizens or having access to government online
services from home; because of the requirements of the migration procedures, it is almost always
necessary for them to be physically present at the government offices at least for certain steps in the
process. In addition, considering foreigners as users is ambiguous and complex
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref8">(Garcia-Garcia &amp;
Gil-Garcia, 2018)</xref>
          , because within this category of users is very diverse and there are many
differences in terms of country of origin, native language, socioeconomic level, and purpose to enter
the host country, among others. For this study, user is the person to whom government services are
provided, which include face-to-face and online services. In other words, migrants are the users of
migration management services, because those services are designed for them to accomplish certain
goals.
        </p>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>3. Research Design and Methods</title>
      <p>This research uses a case study approach. Primary data was collected through two
informationgathering techniques: semi-structured interviews and direct observation. A total of 31 interviews
were conducted with Central American immigrants, non-governmental organizations, government
offices of the state of Chiapas, consulates of several Central American countries, and owners of
internet cafés. We used "snowball" as the sampling technique for this study. Some of the topics
covered in the interviews were the objectives of each intermediary as an organization, their role in
supporting migrants, and how they advise them, the problems that users have to carry out the
procedure, their opinion on the incorporation of technology into migration services, and how they
participate in government programs and services. Analysis of interview data was done through
linking content of the transcribed interviews to key concepts and topics from the literature. For
example, comments on helping immigrants with government processes were associated to the topic
of intermediation, comments on meetings and communication between organizations to the topic of
networks, and ease of use of the website to the topic of usability. Following this process, the most
relevant comments on the subject of intermediation were identified in each interview and then
integrated with the comments of other interviews.</p>
      <p>Direct observation was carried out at NMI facilities, NGOs, consulates, and internet cafés. This
allowed us to reconstruct the information and get to know more about the migrants who came to
request support in some government process, observe interactions between intermediaries and
migrants, and provide a lot of information that helped to know the context in which they are
immersed, as well as their skills and needs. Interviews and observation notes were coded and
analyzed following a qualitative approach and looking for themes that were important from the
migration services.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>4. Preliminary Results</title>
      <p>This section presents our preliminary results with a focus on aspects that are unique or different in
terms of the role of intermediaries for immigration services in contrast with digital government in
general.
4.1.</p>
      <sec id="sec-4-1">
        <title>Consulates as Basic Intermediaries</title>
        <p>Unlike other types of digital government, for migration services the consulates play a very important
role. Consulates are a representation of the government of their country, so they are seen as a safe
place for migrants to ask for help and advise on services and technology. They are a common
intermediary for migrants, especially for those who, given their short time in the country, do not yet
have a social network or do not know any NGOs that also support these processes. For example, the
role of Central American consulates is predominantly to support their nationals and receive
information from the Mexican government, without interfering or making suggestions about work.
The role of consulates is primarily as a link between demand and supply and to provide human
resources with the necessary expertise to assist migrants in online preregistration for certain services.
This function is carried out by consulates that have a larger population of migrants from their
country in southern Mexico. For instance, the consulates of Guatemala and El Salvador are the ones
with the largest migrant population in southern Mexico and, through their operational staff, they
help migrants fill out the pre-registration form and also give them advice on the process. In contrast,
the Honduran consulate is an organization with very few employees and they do not give any
support to their nationals regarding the procedures of the NMI. In general terms, the consulates
have information about the programs of the NMI and thus can advise their nationals. Due to the
nature of migration services, consulates are a type of intermediary that is unique in this context and
play a very important role.
4.2.</p>
      </sec>
      <sec id="sec-4-2">
        <title>Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) as Intermediaries and Activists</title>
        <p>As an intermediary, NGOs contribute substantially, because they do not only support migrants by
filling out the online preregistration, but also provide specific information about government
procedures, directly support individual cases to meet the necessary requirements, and help migrants
to prepare the materials they need to present at the NMI. They have also been promoting policies
such as immigration regularization programs, so their role is the most active of all intermediaries.
Therefore, NGOs are considered for helping migrants, not only because they want to do it, but also
because the NMI promotes their role as intermediaries on its web portal. That is, a person is
encouraged to receive help from an NGO in terms of reviewing their documents and their condition
to know if it is applicable for any type of residence document. In fact, if they do not have the support
of an NGO, it may take much more time for NMI to review their case and process their services.
4.3.</p>
      </sec>
      <sec id="sec-4-3">
        <title>Relationship with a Government from a Different Country</title>
        <p>In most cases where digital government intermediaries exist users are citizens. This condition is
something that facilitates the relationship between government and users, becausesome service
intermediaries help users at the request of a government agency as a strategy that helps them spread
their services online. Regarding immigration services, the users are non-citizens, therefore, it is
necessary to have special considerations when relating to a population with different social and
cultural characteristics. Individuals not familiar with the national language and/or the lexicon of
government organizations will have significant difficulties understanding a process or service.</p>
        <p>Even documented migrants have difficulty understanding the process of immigration
procedures. In addition, since these are services related to regularizing residence in a foreign
country, aspects related to security and border control must also be considered, which makes this
type of process different due to strict data scrutiny. Above all, the most prominent feature of
intermediaries in migration services is their ability to bring government online services closer to
those people who, given that they were admitted as undocumented, face the fear of dealing with
government.</p>
      </sec>
      <sec id="sec-4-4">
        <title>4.4. Low Level of Digital Literacy, Poverty and Legal Vulnerability</title>
        <p>Users of NMI services are migrants based on Mexico's southern border. The immigration
regularization process is aimed at foreigners who have entered Mexico in an unauthorized manner
and who are already living in Mexico, at least for two years. The low level of digital literacy stems
from its low level of schooling and high poverty level. There are users who do not know how to read
or write or only have a couple of years of schooling, as the consul of Guatemala says: "There are a
do not have schooling in which they have learned to use a computer, besides not
everyone has access to a computer. We even have to explain to them what the at sign means when
are frequently in
poverty. Most people who enter Mexico irregularly do not have a permit to reside or to work in
Mexico, so they do not have access to a formal job with a good salary and social benefits. So, in these
situations of low schooling, lack of technological skills, and problems associated with legal
vulnerability and poverty, intermediaries play a very important role in being a bridge between
government and the users of migration services.</p>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>5. Final Comments and Next Steps</title>
      <p>Early studies on government intermediation were focused on analyzing the benefits of
intermediaries in electronic commerce, while more recent studies acknowledge the importance of
intermediaries in bringing digital government closer to citizens. The role of intermediaries in
immigration services is consistent with previous studies. They help to bridge the gap between
supply with demand and they also can reduce the cost for users when they approach these
organizations. Consulates are the only intermediary that have not been studied in digital
government literature and they have a very important role in migration services, because, for many
migrants, the consulate is perhaps one of the safest places, given their legal vulnerability and the
risk of being deported. These and some specific aspects about the intermediation in immigration
services will be more deeply addressed in the following steps in this research. Besides, the specific
characteristics of these intermediaries and the roles they play in the context of immigration services
will be deepened.</p>
      <p>government intermediaries in developing countries. The
Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries, 48(1), 1-14.</p>
      <p>developing countries.</p>
      <p>Electronic Governance of Electronic Government pp 95-104</p>
      <sec id="sec-5-1">
        <title>About the Authors</title>
        <p>Luz Maria Garcia-Garcia
J. Ramon Gil-Garcia
Luz Maria Garcia-Garcia is a full-time professor in the Department of Public Administration at the University
of Sierra Sur (UNSIS), in Oaxaca, Mexico. She holds a PhD in Electronic-Government from University of Sierra
Sur. She is a member of the Mexican National System of Researchers. Her research interest includes
connectivity and digital divide, migration management and digital government.</p>
        <p>J. Ramon Gil-Garcia is an Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy and the Research Director
of the Center for Technology in Government, University at Albany, State University of New York (SUNY). Dr.
Gil-Garcia is a member of the Mexican Academy of Sciences and of the Mexican National System of
Researchers as Researcher Level III, which is the highest distinction a researcher can obtain before becoming
Researcher Emeritus as a result of a life-long career of research contributions. In 2009, he was considered
the most prolific author in the field of digital government research worldwide and in 2013 he was selected
e Business School at Universidad
de las Americas Puebla in Mexico, a Faculty Affiliate at the National Center for Digital Government,
University of Massachusetts Amherst and an Affiliated Faculty member of the Information Science Doctorate
Program at the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, University at Albany. Dr. Gil-Garcia is the</p>
      </sec>
    </sec>
  </body>
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