Deadline extended
to September 10 for Call for Papers - Special Issue -
Journal of Urban Affairs
Guest Editors
Kevin C. Desouza
Foundation Professor, School of Public Affairs, Arizona State University
Email: kevin.desouza@asu.edu
Naim Kapucu
Professor and Director, School of Public Administration, University of Central
Florida
Email: kapucu@ucf.edu
Jiannan Wu*
Distinguished Professor, China Institute for Urban Governance, Shanghai Jiao
Tong University
Email: jnwu@sjtu.edu.cn
*Corresponding
Editor
In 2014, 54% of the world's population, or 3.9 billion
people, lived in urban areas. That's up from one-third in 1950, and forecasters
say the proportion will rise to 66% by 2050. While we have seen a rise in
urbanization over the last few years, and expect this trend to intensify, most
of our cities face severe challenges such as environmental pollution to fragile
transportation infrastructures, a burgeoning of the socio-economic gaps,
increasing crime and poor provision of public safety services, and inaccessible
housing.
Over the last few years, we have seen an increase in
activity around making cities “smarter” and “intelligent” through the creative
application of information systems. In an ideal world, a smarter (and
intelligent) city should be able to leverage data in real-time so as to
increase its situational awareness, thereby enabling for effective and
efficient decision-making at the individual, organizational, and collective
levels so as to advance its goals of resilience, sustainability, and
livability.
From a design, planning, and implementation
perspective however, our theoretical and empirical knowledge on smart cities is
limited. One reason for this is the simple fact that the term smart/intelligent
city is nebulous. Some use the term smart city to highlight advances in
sustainability and greening of the city, while others use the term to portray
infusion of information via technologies to better the lives of citizens that
reside in these spaces. Even others consider the presence of high-level of citizen
engagement in the design and governance of the space as a key attribute of
smarter cities.
Fundamental questions on the topic of smart cities
remain unexplored. For example, what are the baseline features of a smart city?
Alternatively, how would you be able to distinguish a smart city from one that
is not? This is a non-trivial question, as at some level all cities have some
level of intelligence (smartness) so long as they are not in total disarray
(e.g. under conditions of war, famine, etc.).
Two concepts that seem to be fundamental to
conceptualizing smart cities are sustainability and resiliency. How these
concepts get incorporated into a cities fabric requires careful examination.
Other questions that require scholarly consideration include: how do you plan
for a smart city? Most planners have to work within existing infrastructure,
space, and governance constraints. Given these realities, what are the most
tangible ways to infuse intelligence into the planning processes and outcomes
so as to get realize the vision of smarter cities? How can you retrofit
existing plans, systems, and infrastructures to make them smarter?
Governance of cities to make them smarter is also a
critical issue. Collaborative governance that brings together multiple
stakeholders is essential to tackle complex planning and design problems
towards the design of smart cities. Our knowledge in this area is also
deficient. What are decision-making and planning frameworks that work in the
context of design of smart cities? Do smart cities learn from their peer
cities, if so, how? How do you engage citizens in a bottom-up (emergent) manner
to arrive at designs and plans that impact their cities?
Finally, planning for (and designing) smart cities
requires us to visualize them as complex adaptive systems. Cities are comprised
of multiple systems from physical (e.g. power grids) to social (e.g. economic)
each of which are complex on their own right. The complexity rises (most often
exponentially) as these systems interact with each other. Moreover, each of
these systems have components that interact with each other (and also interact
with components in other systems) at multiple scales. Information moves within
and across the various systems. The management of information across the
various systems is critical if we are to realize the goal of building smart
cities. How do you study the interactions among the various subsystems and
infrastructures within a city? How are information pipelines designed to
coordinate local systems so as to increase global situational awareness? How
are emerging technologies (e.g. mobile apps) and the availability of data at
finer granularities (e.g. through open data initiatives) changing the nature of
planning?
This special issue will take a multi-disciplinary view
to the concept of smart cities. Papers that explore the theoretical and applied
dimensions of smart cities are welcome. We are open to all methodological
approaches. Submissions may address any of the following topics but are not
limited to these:
·
Planning and governance of
emerging technologies (e.g. autonomous vehicles, drones, robotics)
·
Intelligent approaches to
disaster management, emergency planning, and informatics for increased
resilience
·
Collaborative governance across
approaches jurisdictions and sectors including public budgeting, resource
pooling, infrastructure management, and social innovation
·
Analytics and performance
management in the context of public agencies
·
Innovations in delivery of
public services
·
Public private partnerships –
case of successful ones and failures
·
Smart infrastructure,
buildings, waste management
·
Planning of smarter urban
transportation networks, including sharing economy models (e.g. Uber, Lyft,
etc.) and retrofitting and upgrading infrastructure
·
Open data, crowdsourcing, and
big data analytics for real-time situational awareness and intelligent decision-making
Key Dates
Call for abstract deadline: September10, 2017
Notification for abstract acceptance: September 25,
2017
Full paper discussion: October 29-30, 2017 (it is not
required though we encourage, please see below for more information about 2017
Global Cities Forum)
Full paper submitted to Journal of Urban Affairs: December,
1, 2017 (All papers need to be submitted directly through the manuscript system:
https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/juaf)