The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø

A pragmatic and polity-focused solution for governing a smart city in the direction of sustainability is still missing in theory and practice. A debate about whether a smart city is a pragmatic solution for modern challenges or just a technology-led urban utopia is entangled with the vexed issue of...

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Published in:Infrastructures
Main Authors: Savis Gohari, Dirk Ahlers, Brita F. Nielsen, Eivind Junker
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures5040031
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author Savis Gohari
Dirk Ahlers
Brita F. Nielsen
Eivind Junker
author_facet Savis Gohari
Dirk Ahlers
Brita F. Nielsen
Eivind Junker
author_sort Savis Gohari
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 4
container_start_page 31
container_title Infrastructures
container_volume 5
description A pragmatic and polity-focused solution for governing a smart city in the direction of sustainability is still missing in theory and practice. A debate about whether a smart city is a pragmatic solution for modern challenges or just a technology-led urban utopia is entangled with the vexed issue of governance. While ‘smart governance’ has drawn unprecedented interest, the combination of its conceptual vagueness and broad applications couple with a lack of focus on its underlying international and local political paradigms have raised concerns about its utility. This study contributes to restoring attention to the original concept of governance, its differences with governing and government, and the potential challenges resulting from its functionality in its real, multi-layered, and complex contexts. This paper explores the intellectual connection between governance and smart cities, from both an empirical and a conceptual/analytical perspective. From the empirical side, we examine which actors, processes, and relational mechanisms at different levels that have had an impact on the initiation of smart cities in three Norwegian cities: Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø. We illustrate how the structural sources of the interests, roles, and power in smart city initiatives have caused governance to emerge and change, but have also affected the goals designed by specific actors.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2412-3811/5/4/31/ 2025-01-16T21:19:40+00:00 The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø Savis Gohari Dirk Ahlers Brita F. Nielsen Eivind Junker 2020-03-25 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures5040031 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures5040031 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Infrastructures; Volume 5; Issue 4; Pages: 31 smart city sustainability smart sustainable cities governance city planning informality Trondheim Bergen Bodø Text 2020 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures5040031 2023-07-31T23:17:03Z A pragmatic and polity-focused solution for governing a smart city in the direction of sustainability is still missing in theory and practice. A debate about whether a smart city is a pragmatic solution for modern challenges or just a technology-led urban utopia is entangled with the vexed issue of governance. While ‘smart governance’ has drawn unprecedented interest, the combination of its conceptual vagueness and broad applications couple with a lack of focus on its underlying international and local political paradigms have raised concerns about its utility. This study contributes to restoring attention to the original concept of governance, its differences with governing and government, and the potential challenges resulting from its functionality in its real, multi-layered, and complex contexts. This paper explores the intellectual connection between governance and smart cities, from both an empirical and a conceptual/analytical perspective. From the empirical side, we examine which actors, processes, and relational mechanisms at different levels that have had an impact on the initiation of smart cities in three Norwegian cities: Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø. We illustrate how the structural sources of the interests, roles, and power in smart city initiatives have caused governance to emerge and change, but have also affected the goals designed by specific actors. Text Bodø Bodø MDPI Open Access Publishing Bergen Bodø ENVELOPE(14.405,14.405,67.280,67.280) Infrastructures 5 4 31
spellingShingle smart city
sustainability
smart sustainable cities
governance
city planning
informality
Trondheim
Bergen
Bodø
Savis Gohari
Dirk Ahlers
Brita F. Nielsen
Eivind Junker
The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title_full The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title_fullStr The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title_full_unstemmed The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title_short The Governance Approach of Smart City Initiatives. Evidence from Trondheim, Bergen, and Bodø
title_sort governance approach of smart city initiatives. evidence from trondheim, bergen, and bodø
topic smart city
sustainability
smart sustainable cities
governance
city planning
informality
Trondheim
Bergen
Bodø
topic_facet smart city
sustainability
smart sustainable cities
governance
city planning
informality
Trondheim
Bergen
Bodø
url https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures5040031