Administrative Sciences, Vol. 15, Pages 324: Towards Smart Public Administration: A TOE-Based Empirical Study of AI Chatbot Adoption in a Transitioning Government Context


Administrative Sciences, Vol. 15, Pages 324: Towards Smart Public Administration: A TOE-Based Empirical Study of AI Chatbot Adoption in a Transitioning Government Context

Administrative Sciences doi: 10.3390/admsci15080324

Authors:
Mansur Samadovich Omonov
Yonghan Ahn

As governments pursue digital transformation to improve service delivery and administrative efficiency, AI chatbots have emerged as a promising innovation in smart public administration. However, their adoption remains limited, particularly in transitioning countries where institutional, organizational, and technological conditions are complex and evolving. This study aims to empirically examine the key aspects, challenges, and strategic implications of AI chatbots’ adoption in public administration of Uzbekistan, a transitioning government in Central Asia. The study offers a novel contribution by employing an extended technology–organization–environment (TOE) framework. Data were collected through a survey among 501 public employees and partial least squares structural equation modeling was used to analyze data. The results reveal that perceived usefulness, compatibility, organizational readiness, effective accountability, and ethical AI regulation are key enablers, while system complexity, traditional leadership, resistance to change, and concerns over data management and security pose major barriers. The findings contribute to the literature on effective innovation in public administration and provide practical insights for policymakers and public managers aiming to effectively implement AI solutions in complex governance settings.



Source link

Mansur Samadovich Omonov www.mdpi.com