DATA- AND KNOWLEDGE-DRIVEN SMART CITY STRATEGIES: RESEARCH ON IMPLEMENTATION CHALLENGES OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN TURKEY
Affiliation:
1. SAKARYA ÜNİVERSİTESİ, SİYASAL BİLGİLER FAKÜLTESİ, ÇALIŞMA EKONOMİSİ VE ENDÜSTRİ İLİŞKİLERİ BÖLÜMÜ, ÇALIŞMA EKONOMİSİ ANABİLİM DALI
Abstract
The present study sought an answer to the question, “What kind of challenges do local governments in Turkey confront while implementing data- and knowledge-driven smart city strategies?”. It seems noteworthy to explore tacit links between such implementation challenges through a field study employing an exploratory design. Thanks to the original theoretical framework enriched with empirical findings, this research is expected to bring practical and theoretical contributions to the smart city literature. The data were gathered through face-to-face, semi-structured interviews with 23 personnel of Sakarya Metropolitan Municipality (SMM), which has become the very first local government in Turkey to have introduced a smart city strategy and action plan. In this field research employing a single case, the content analysis technique was utilized to interpret the findings. Accordingly, SMM is faced with basically data-driven difficulties such as data security, poor technological and physical infrastructure, insufficient budget and high costs, dubious legal regulations and bureaucracy, resistance to change, lack of human resources and high turnover, and digital divide while implementing its smart city strategy.
Publisher
Yonetim ve Ekonomi Arastirmalari Dergisi - Journal of Management and Economics Research
Reference51 articles.
1. Airaksinen, M., Huovila, A., Pinto-Seppa, I., Piira, K., Bosch, P., Penttinen, T., Neumann, H. M. and Kontinakis, N. (2017). “CITYkeys Smart City Performance Measurement System”, International Journal for Housing Science and Its Applications, 41(2): 113–125. 2. Alberts, G., Went, M. and Jansma, R. (2017). “Archaeology of the Amsterdam Digital City: Why Digital Data Are Dynamic and Should Be Treated Accordingly”, Internet Histories: Digital Technology, Culture and Society, 1(1-2): 46–159. 3. Angelakoglou, K., Nikolopoulos, N., Giourka, P., Svensonn, I. L., Tsarchopoulos, P., Tryferidis, A. and Tzovaras, D. (2019). “A Methodological Framework for the Selection of Key Performance Indicators to Assess Smart City Solutions”, Smart Cities, 2: 269–306. 4. Borsekova, K., Korony, S., Venova, A. and Vitalisova, K. (2018). “Functionally Between the Size and Indicators of Smart Cities: A Research Challenge with Policy Implications”, Cities, 78: 17–26. 5. Bria, F. (2012). “New Governance Models Towards an Open Internet Ecosystem for Smart Connected European Cities and Regions”, Open Innovation, Directorate-General for the Information Society and Media, Luxembourg: European Commission, 62–71.
|
|