2017
DOI: 10.31235/osf.io/rxk4r
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Smart cities, urban technocrats, epistemic communities and advocacy coalitions

Abstract: In this paper, we argue that the ideas, ideals and the rapid proliferation of smart city rhetoric and initiatives globally have been facilitated and promoted by three inter-related communities. A new set of 'urban technocrats' -chief innovation/technology/data officers, project managers, consultants, designers, engineers, change-management civil servants, and academics -many of which have become embedded in city administrations. A smart cities 'epistemic community'; that is, a network of knowledge and policy e… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…However, the different categories of stakeholders involved is quite diverse: private companies, philanthropy organisations, research agencies, universities, institutions, governmental bodies (regional, national, and international), city administrators, and NGOs. For the use and implementation of SIS, SIS specialist bodies are being created: regional bodies, national bodies, specialist units within existing bodies, international specialist institutions and lobby groups, as well as international standards bodies (Kitchin et al 2017;Yin et al 2015).…”
Section: Picture Freeimages Sias Van Schalkwykmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the different categories of stakeholders involved is quite diverse: private companies, philanthropy organisations, research agencies, universities, institutions, governmental bodies (regional, national, and international), city administrators, and NGOs. For the use and implementation of SIS, SIS specialist bodies are being created: regional bodies, national bodies, specialist units within existing bodies, international specialist institutions and lobby groups, as well as international standards bodies (Kitchin et al 2017;Yin et al 2015).…”
Section: Picture Freeimages Sias Van Schalkwykmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Municipal governments publishing open data can also be seen as technocratic in their approach to urban planning. Kitchin, Coletta, Evans, Heaphy, and MacDonncha () note that cities have recently tried to use open data and other smart city initiatives to claim urban planning is data‐driven and therefore impartial. However, Kitchin et al () go on to say that data‐driven urban planning pushes decision‐making to academics and corporations, not citizens.…”
Section: Barriers To Using Participatory Geospatial Data: Knowledge mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kitchin, Coletta, Evans, Heaphy, and MacDonncha () note that cities have recently tried to use open data and other smart city initiatives to claim urban planning is data‐driven and therefore impartial. However, Kitchin et al () go on to say that data‐driven urban planning pushes decision‐making to academics and corporations, not citizens. Citizens not being involved in urban planning in this way perpetuates the idea that only trained experts can effectively use data, the myth of technocracy identified by Jasanoff ().…”
Section: Barriers To Using Participatory Geospatial Data: Knowledge mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, topical studies tend to deal mostly with data-driven smart urbanism (e.g., [7,[35][36][37]40] while barely exploring how this approach can improve and advance sustainable urbanism under what is labeled 'data-driven smart sustainable cities' as a leading paradigm of urbanism [11,12]. Moreover, research on big data applications in the context of smart cities tends to deal largely with economic growth, the quality of life, and governance (e.g., [5, 8, 15, 26, 30-33, 35, 49] while overlooking the rather more urgent issues and complex challenges related to sustainability.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%