Digital governance has transformed how states design public services, manage data, and interact with citizens. In parallel, e-democracy tools—ranging from e-consultations and e-petitions to internet voting—have expanded opportunities for participation, deliberation, and accountability. Yet these gains come with new risks: exclusion through the digital divide, privacy and surveillance concerns, cybersecurity threats, algorithmic bias, and platform-driven information disorder that can distort democratic processes. This paper builds a conceptual bridge between digital governance and e-democracy by mapping their core components (digital identity, interoperable platforms, open data, participatory mechanisms, and institutional capacity), reviewing global and Indian practices, and identifying policy and research priorities. Using a qualitative, secondary-data approach, the paper proposes a framework for “trustworthy digital democracy,” emphasizing legality, transparency, security-by-design, citizen-centric service delivery, and meaningful participation.
Sidharth Jadhav (Fri,) studied this question.