Creating Smart-er Cities
Edited by Mark Deakin
Published January 16th 2013 by Routledge – 104 pages
Drawing upon the smart experiences of "world class" cities in North America, Canada and Europe, this book provides the evidence to show how entrepreneurship-based and market-dependent representations of knowledge production are now being replaced with a community of policy makers, academic leaders, corporate strategists and growth management alliances, with the potential to liberate cities from the stagnation which they have previously been locked into by offering communities:
Drawing together the critical insights from papers from a collection of leading international experts on the transition to smart cities, this book proposes to do what has recently been asked of those responsible for creating Smarter Cities. That is: provide the definitional components, critical insights and institutional means by which to get beyond the all too often self-congratulatory tone cities across the world strike when claiming to be smart and by focussing on the critical role master-plans and design codes play in supporting the sustainable development of communities.
This book was published as a special issue of Urban Technology.
1. Creating Smart-er Cities: An Overview 2. The IntelCities Community of Practice: The Capacity-Building, Co-Design, Evaluation, and Monitoring of E-Government Services 3. The Business Models and Information Architectures of Smart Cities 4. The Triple-Helix Model of Smart Cities: A Neo-Evolutionary Perspective 5. Smart Cities in Europe 6. SCRAN: The Network
Name: Creating Smart-er Cities (Hardback) – Routledge
Description: Edited by Mark Deakin. Drawing upon the smart experiences of "world class" cities in North America, Canada and Europe, this book provides the evidence to show how entrepreneurship-based and market-dependent representations of knowledge production are now being...
Categories: City and Urban Planning, Urban Landscape, Cities & Infrastructure (Urban Studies), Building and Construction, Planning and Sustainability, Spatial and Regional Planning