2016
DOI: 10.1177/0008125616683954
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A Smart City Is a Collaborative Community

Abstract: Initiatives to redesign cities so that they are smarter and more sustainable are increasing worldwide. A smart city can be understood as a community in which citizens, business firms, knowledge institutions, and municipal agencies collaborate with one another to achieve systems integration and efficiency, citizen engagement, and a continually improving quality of life. This article presents an organizational framework for such collaboration and employs it to analyze Smart Aarhus, the smartcity initiative of Aa… Show more

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Cited by 144 publications
(128 citation statements)
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References 3 publications
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“…Firms have become increasingly embedded in interorganizational networks with respect to social, professional, and exchange relationships (see Granovetter 1985;Gulati 1998;Parkhe et al 2006;Snow 2015;Snow et al 2016). Digitization has become an accelerator for this development to the extent that firms have changed their modus operandi from competition to cooperation to collaboration due to social and technological conditions (Snow 2015, p. 1).…”
Section: Interorganizational Network As Value Creating Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firms have become increasingly embedded in interorganizational networks with respect to social, professional, and exchange relationships (see Granovetter 1985;Gulati 1998;Parkhe et al 2006;Snow 2015;Snow et al 2016). Digitization has become an accelerator for this development to the extent that firms have changed their modus operandi from competition to cooperation to collaboration due to social and technological conditions (Snow 2015, p. 1).…”
Section: Interorganizational Network As Value Creating Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other authors claim that this wedding of big global vendors and local governments results in a substantially vendor-driven top-down approach that loses touch with reality and leaves little room to the concrete needs of ordinary people [60,61]. A growing line of research proposes, instead, a bottom-up, actor-oriented architecture [62] for managing smart city initiatives [63,64]. This line of research converges with the steadily growing attention to local entrepreneurship as the core engine of viable smart innovation [21,[64][65][66][67][68], because entrepreneurs can (re)build new tailored business models that fit a specific city's needs and conditions.…”
Section: The Smart City As An Organizational Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These datasets can be used to develop new products, services, and digital applications. Any firm or individual citizen can access the more than 75 datasets in Open Data Aarhus and use the data for collective purposes (Snow et al 2016). Shared situation awareness is a commons that facilitates self-organization.…”
Section: Commonsmentioning
confidence: 99%