One of the biggest challenges to finding government-related information about Mexico is a general lack of such information online. As I began pulling together my research and previous blog posts for my reflection paper, I continued to browse for sources. Serendipitous discovery: I found the portal for the e-Mexico project I mentioned in this post. And happily, the portal is also available in English: http://www.e-mexico.gob.mx/. A search on the Spanish version of the site for "biblioteca" yielded a large number of results, ranging from a public health library to the congressional library (http://www.diputados.gob.mx/cedia/biblio/depleg_decre.htm. The site is a gold mine of information, and I am now near the end of my research project!The four primary "pillars" of the portal are e-Aprendizaje (Learning), e-Salud (Health), e-Economia (Commerce), and e-Gobierno (Government). Some sections are divided by content focusing on specific groups, such as women, senior citizens, the poor, and so forth. There is a page listing e-communities centered around shared interests: http://www.e-comunidades.gob.mx/, and links to related sites, such as INAFED, or E-local (http://www.e-local.gob.mx/), a site dedicated to making local government processes and information more transparent and available to the public.
While I didn't find loads articles on the e-Mexico project in English in the literature, this site would be worthy of its own research project given its breadth and the many groups it is working to provide information to.

