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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Are Smart Innovation Ecosystems Really Seeking to Meet Citizens’ Needs? Insights from the Stakeholders’ Vision on Smart City Strategy Implementation

TLDR
Analyzing the processes for building effective smart cities by integrating the different perspectives of smart innovations and using the core components of smart cities according to a conceptual framework developed in previous research provides useful insights for smart city stakeholders in adopting social and technological innovation to improve the global competitiveness of their cities.
Abstract
The concept of a smart city is becoming the leading paradigm worldwide. Consequently, a creative mix of emerging technologies and open innovation is gradually becoming the defining element of smart city evolution, changing the ways in which city administrators are organizing their services and development globally. Thus, the smart city concept is becoming extremely relevant on the agendas of policy-makers as a development strategy for enhancing the quality of life of the citizen and improving the sustainability goals of their cities. Despite of the relevance of the topic, still few studies investigate how open innovation shapes the way cities become smarter or focus on the experiences of professionals to understand the concept of a smart city and its implementation. This paper fills this gap and analyzes the processes for building effective smart cities by integrating the different perspectives of smart innovations and using the core components of smart cities according to a conceptual framework developed in previous research. In so doing, it provides useful insights for smart city stakeholders in adopting social and technological innovation to improve the global competitiveness of their cities. The empirical dataset allows examining how “smart cities” are being implemented in Manchester (UK), and in Boston, Massachusetts, and San Diego City (United States of America (USA)), including archival data and in-depth interviews with core smart city stakeholders who are involved in smart city projects and programs across the cases. Results from empirical data suggest that the conceptualization of smart cities across the cases is similar with a strong emphasis on social and technological innovation aimed at addressing municipal challenges in the core sub-systems of the cities, which include mobility, environmental sustainability, entrepreneurial development, quality of life, and social cohesion. The results also reveal benefits and challenges relating to smart innovation ecosystems across the cases and the future directions of their diffusion.

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Posted Content

An Overview of Innovation

TL;DR: The process of innovation must be viewed as a series of changes in a complete system not only of hardware, but also of market environment, production facilities and knowledge, and the social contexts of the innovation organization as discussed by the authors.

Public Transportation’s Role in Responding to Climate Change [January 2010]

Tina Hodges
TL;DR: The FTA collects and analyzes data from across the country on public transportation fuel use, vehicles deployed, rides taken, and other key metrics, which can provide valuable insight into the impacts of automobile, truck, SUV, and public transportation travel on the production of greenhouse gas emissions as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Key performance indicators for Smart Campus and Microgrid

TL;DR: The aim of this work is to establish a mechanism that allows campus management to monitor the smartness of their university campus in general, and microgrid in particular.
Journal ArticleDOI

MicroServices Suite for Smart City Applications.

TL;DR: This work has developed in the framework of the Select4Cities PCP (PreCommercial Procurement), funded by the European Commission as Snap4City platform, and implemented a suite of MicroServices for Node-RED, which has allowed for the creation of a wide range of new IoT applications for smart cities.
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Understanding the What, Why, and How of Becoming a Smart City: Experiences from Kakinada and Kanpur

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored how smartness is understood in these cities and examined the local conditions shaping SC objectives by studying the existing issues in the cities, the proposed projects, and the perception of SC experts on what they understand by smartness; why cities want to become smart; and how they will become smart.
References
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Book

Case Study Research: Design and Methods

Robert K. Yin
TL;DR: In this article, buku ini mencakup lebih dari 50 studi kasus, memberikan perhatian untuk analisis kuantitatif, membahas lebah lengkap penggunaan desain metode campuran penelitian, and termasuk wawasan metodologi baru.
Journal ArticleDOI

The qualitative content analysis process

TL;DR: Inductive content analysis is used in cases where there are no previous studies dealing with the phenomenon or when it is fragmented, and a deductive approach is useful if the general aim was to test a previous theory in a different situation or to compare categories at different time periods.
Journal Article

Five Misunderstandings About Case-Study Research

TL;DR: The authors examines five common misunderstandings about case-study research and concludes with the Kuhnian insight that a scientific discipline without a large number of thoroughly executed case studies is a discipline without systematic production of exemplars.
Journal ArticleDOI

Five Misunderstandings About Case-Study Research

TL;DR: The authors examines five common misunderstandings about case-study research: theoretical knowledge is more valuable than practical knowledge, one cannot generalize from a single case, therefore, the single-case study cannot contribute to scientific development, the case study is most useful for generating hypotheses, whereas other methods are more suitable for hypotheses testing and theory building, case study contains a bias toward verification, and it is often difficult to summarize specific case studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Open for innovation: the role of openness in explaining innovation performance among U.K. manufacturing firms

TL;DR: Using a large-scale sample of industrial firms, this paper links search strategy to innovative performance, finding that searching widely and deeply is curvilinearly (taking an inverted U-shape) related to performance.
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