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247R_Data-driven urban management: Mapping the landscape (research summary)
Manage episode 435128819 series 3291681
Are you interested in data-driven urban management?
Summary of the article titled Data-driven urban management: Mapping the landscape from 2020 by Zeynep Engin, Justin van Dijk, Tian Lan, Paul A. Longley, Philip Treleaven, Michael Batty, and Alan Penn, published in the Journal of Urban Management.
This is a great preparation to our next interview with Alejandro Quinto in episode 248 talking about utilising data in urban planning and management.
Since we are investigating the future of cities, I thought it would be interesting to see the urban data landscape with its shortcomings and hidden gems. This article provides a transdisciplinary synthesis of the developments, opportunities, and challenges for urban management and planning under this ongoing ‘digital revolution’.
As the most important things, I would like to highlight 3 aspects:
- Considerations, including privacy and transparency, are crucial in deploying these technologies effectively.
- Data and technology are transforming urban management, enabling smarter, more efficient city governance.
- Successful data-driven management relies on accurate data, advanced analytics, and collaboration among all stakeholders.
You can find the article through this link.
Abstract: Big data analytics and artificial intelligence, paired with blockchain technology, the Internet of Things, and other emerging technologies, are poised to revolutionise urban management. With massive amounts of data collected from citizens, devices, and traditional sources such as routine and well-established censuses, urban areas across the world have – for the first time in history – the opportunity to monitor and manage their urban infrastructure in real-time. This simultaneously provides previously unimaginable opportunities to shape the future of cities, but also gives rise to new ethical challenges. This paper provides a transdisciplinary synthesis of the developments, opportunities, and challenges for urban management and planning under this ongoing ‘digital revolution’ to provide a reference point for the largely fragmented research efforts and policy practice in this area. We consider both top-down systems engineering approaches and the bottom-up emergent approaches to coordination of different systems and functions, their implications for the existing physical and institutional constraints on the built environment and various planning practices, as well as the social and ethical considerations associated with this transformation from non-digital urban management to data-driven urban management.
Connecting episodes you might be interested in:
- No.005R - Smart cities, big data and urban policy
- No.132 - Interview with Michael Batty, the father of urban data management
- No.141 - Interview with Soheil Sabri about digital twins
You can find the transcript through this link.
What wast the most interesting part for you? What questions did arise for you? Let me know on Twitter @WTF4Cities or on the wtf4cities.com website where the shownotes are also available.
I hope this was an interesting episode for you and thanks for tuning in.
Music by Lesfm from Pixabay
325 episod
Manage episode 435128819 series 3291681
Are you interested in data-driven urban management?
Summary of the article titled Data-driven urban management: Mapping the landscape from 2020 by Zeynep Engin, Justin van Dijk, Tian Lan, Paul A. Longley, Philip Treleaven, Michael Batty, and Alan Penn, published in the Journal of Urban Management.
This is a great preparation to our next interview with Alejandro Quinto in episode 248 talking about utilising data in urban planning and management.
Since we are investigating the future of cities, I thought it would be interesting to see the urban data landscape with its shortcomings and hidden gems. This article provides a transdisciplinary synthesis of the developments, opportunities, and challenges for urban management and planning under this ongoing ‘digital revolution’.
As the most important things, I would like to highlight 3 aspects:
- Considerations, including privacy and transparency, are crucial in deploying these technologies effectively.
- Data and technology are transforming urban management, enabling smarter, more efficient city governance.
- Successful data-driven management relies on accurate data, advanced analytics, and collaboration among all stakeholders.
You can find the article through this link.
Abstract: Big data analytics and artificial intelligence, paired with blockchain technology, the Internet of Things, and other emerging technologies, are poised to revolutionise urban management. With massive amounts of data collected from citizens, devices, and traditional sources such as routine and well-established censuses, urban areas across the world have – for the first time in history – the opportunity to monitor and manage their urban infrastructure in real-time. This simultaneously provides previously unimaginable opportunities to shape the future of cities, but also gives rise to new ethical challenges. This paper provides a transdisciplinary synthesis of the developments, opportunities, and challenges for urban management and planning under this ongoing ‘digital revolution’ to provide a reference point for the largely fragmented research efforts and policy practice in this area. We consider both top-down systems engineering approaches and the bottom-up emergent approaches to coordination of different systems and functions, their implications for the existing physical and institutional constraints on the built environment and various planning practices, as well as the social and ethical considerations associated with this transformation from non-digital urban management to data-driven urban management.
Connecting episodes you might be interested in:
- No.005R - Smart cities, big data and urban policy
- No.132 - Interview with Michael Batty, the father of urban data management
- No.141 - Interview with Soheil Sabri about digital twins
You can find the transcript through this link.
What wast the most interesting part for you? What questions did arise for you? Let me know on Twitter @WTF4Cities or on the wtf4cities.com website where the shownotes are also available.
I hope this was an interesting episode for you and thanks for tuning in.
Music by Lesfm from Pixabay
325 episod
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