Characterising Smartness to Make Smart Cities Resilient
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Method
3. Results
3.1. Urban Resilience Dimensions
3.2. Smart City Dimensions
- The eight clusters of factors include (1) management and organisation, (2) technology, (3) governance, (4) policy, (5) people and communities, (6) the economy, (7) built infrastructure, and (8) the natural environment [63].
- Smart City components by Gil-Garcia et al. [64]: (1) public services, (2) city administration and management, (3) policies and other institutional arrangements, (4) governance, engagement and collaboration, (5) human capital and creativity, (6) knowledge economy and pro-business environment, (7) built environment and city infrastructure, (8) natural environment and ecological sustainability, (9) ICT and other technologies, and (10) data and information.
- Nam and Pardo’s [65] key conceptual components of a Smart City: technology factors (physical infrastructure, smart technologies, mobile technologies, virtual technologies, and digital networks), institutional factors (governance, policy, regulations/directives), and human factors (human infrastructure, social capital), etc.
4. Discussion
- Smart environment/ecosystem(natural environment)
- Smart people/people
- Smart governance/leadership and strategy (knowledge)
- Smart economy/economy
- Smart living and smart mobility (transportation)/infrastructure, spatiality, society and living (organisation)
- ICT infrastructure
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Ecosystem (natural environment),
- (2)
- Infrastructure,
- (3)
- Spatiality,
- (4)
- Society and living (organisation),
- (5)
- People,
- (6)
- Cooperation,
- (7)
- Economy,
- (8)
- Leadership and strategy (knowledge),
- (9)
- Information and technology,
- (10)
- Emergency/disaster management and preparedness.
- Smart economy,
- Smart governance,
- Smart people,
- Smart mobility,
- Smart living,
- Smart environment.
- Smart environment/ecosystem(natural environment)
- Smart people/people
- Smart governance/leadership and strategy (knowledge)
- Smart economy/economy
- Smart living and Smart mobility (transportation)/infrastructure, spatiality, society and living (organisation)
- ICT infrastructure
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sources Dimensions | a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Infrastructure | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Ecosystem | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||
Society/social (organisation) | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
Economy | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
Health and wellbeing of individuals (people) | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
Leadership and strategy (knowledge) | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
Emergency services and preparedness | x | x | x | x | x | |||||
Cooperation | x | x | ||||||||
Spatiality | x | |||||||||
Information, communication and technology | x | x | ||||||||
a = [9], b = [44], c = [45], d = [46], e = [47], f = [48], g = [49], h = [50], i = [51], j = [52] |
Urban (City) Resilience Dimensions | Smart City Dimensions |
---|---|
Ecosystem (natural environment) | Smart environment |
Infrastructure | Smart living, Smart mobility (transportation) |
Spatiality | |
Society and living (organisation) | |
People | Smart people |
Cooperation | Internal and external relationships and learning within/between cities |
Economy | Smart economy |
Leadership and strategy (knowledge) | Smart governance |
Information and technology | Smart mobility (ICT infrastructure) (for Emergency/disaster management and preparedness) |
Emergency/disaster management and preparedness | Emergency/disaster management and preparedness in Smart Cities |
Smart City Dimension/Urban (City) Resilience Dimension | Urban (City) Resilience Sub-Dimensions/Smartness Criteria Which Reflect the Resilience |
---|---|
Smart environment/ecosystem (natural environment) | Ecosystem management Hazard risk, exposure, intensity, and Severity |
Environment policy | |
Hazard Risk, exposure, intensity and severity | |
Sustainability | |
Protective resources | |
Degradation | |
Available green space per capita | |
Smart people/people | Collective identity and empowerment Community and social engagement and support Skills for leaning/language competency/population literacy rate Trust Satisfaction Worldview Collective action and decision making Psychosocial preparedness Communication capacity Educational equity Social character (sex, age, migration, education, employment, family composition, language, need for assistance) Risk knowledge Community competence |
Smart governance/leadership and strategy (knowledge) | Effective leadership and management Policy and legislation Integrated development planning Cross-sectorial and multi-governance collaboration Learning culture/learning and dissemination/research and development Institutional character and diversity Service centres |
Smart economy/economy | Sustainable economy Asset ownership Income/wealth generation Employability and employment diversity Economic diversity Population growth The financial status of the local government Economic development and prosperity Financial services Industry–employment–services and production Commercial centres Innovation Economic Relations Economic Recovery Single sector employment dependence Equality and female Employment Sector capacity Labour market Business sizes and cost of defraying |
Smart living and smart mobility (transportation)/infrastructure, spatiality, society and living (organisation) | Infrastructure Critical infrastructure Reliable infrastructure and mobility Reduced exposure to disaster and fragility Land use planning for hazards Age and type of dwellings Resources to build up resilience Lifelines Shelter capacity Access/evacuation potential Transportation network Structure continuity of critical services Connection diversity with other areas (air, rail, and road) Fire stations City physical integrity (population density and balanced residential density) |
Spatiality Urban size Urban sprawl Urban form | |
Society and living (organisation) Comprehensive security and rule of law Minimal human vulnerability Diverse livelihoods and employment Effective safeguards to human health and life Child and elderly services Quality of life Cultural and heritage services Place attachment Social stability Public health services Education services Religion and culture Social services (volunteers and registered non-governmental organisations) | |
ICT infrastructure | Reliable mobility and communication Broadband access Mobile phone coverage Use of technology for all stages in disaster risk reduction/resilience |
Smart City Dimension | Corresponding Urban (City) Resilience Dimension | Corresponding Urban (City) Resilience Sub-Dimension/Smartness Criteria that Reflect the Resilience | Smart Characteristics/Smartness Criteria Required to Make Smart Cities Resilient | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
Smart Environment | Ecosystem (natural environment) | Ecosystem Management | Smart ecosystem management or technoecology | [73,74] |
Environment policy | Adoption of resilience as a policy goal should not be allowed to justify interventions that will have a negative impact on biodiversity | [75] | ||
Hazard risk, exposure, intensity and severity | Relocation of particularly vulnerable parts of cities could be integrated into the planning of future development/redevelopment opportunities | [76] | ||
Sustainability | Smart energy management (including inclusive distribution of Sustainable Energy Generation Hubs) | [77] | ||
Smart waste management | [78] | |||
Minimizing carbon emissions, Measuring and alleviating carbon emissions resulting from technology consumption, Imposing sustainability fees for visitors | [79,80,81] | |||
Protective resources | Nature-based solutions | [82,83] | ||
Degradation | Public policies aiming at territorial planning | [84] | ||
Available green space per capita | “Smart urban forest” applications | [73] |
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Samarakkody, A.; Amaratunga, D.; Haigh, R. Characterising Smartness to Make Smart Cities Resilient. Sustainability 2022, 14, 12716. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912716
Samarakkody A, Amaratunga D, Haigh R. Characterising Smartness to Make Smart Cities Resilient. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):12716. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912716
Chicago/Turabian StyleSamarakkody, Aravindi, Dilanthi Amaratunga, and Richard Haigh. 2022. "Characterising Smartness to Make Smart Cities Resilient" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 12716. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912716
APA StyleSamarakkody, A., Amaratunga, D., & Haigh, R. (2022). Characterising Smartness to Make Smart Cities Resilient. Sustainability, 14(19), 12716. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912716