Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract 956 views 178 downloads
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective
Proceedings of 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability
Swansea University Author: Tom Crick
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Abstract
This paper explores whether it is useful to view the fundamental ideas behind the smart city concept through the lens of the 'Public Value Management' (PVM) paradigm. It investigates how appropriate ICT investment in cities might be articulated and valued through the concept of PVM. In ord...
Published in: | Proceedings of 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability |
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Published: |
Stockholm, Sweden
Atlantic Press
2014
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https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/ict4s-14/13463 |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa43393 |
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2022-12-18T17:46:07.5398201 v2 43393 2018-08-14 The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective 200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99 0000-0001-5196-9389 Tom Crick Tom Crick true false 2018-08-14 EDUC This paper explores whether it is useful to view the fundamental ideas behind the smart city concept through the lens of the 'Public Value Management' (PVM) paradigm. It investigates how appropriate ICT investment in cities might be articulated and valued through the concept of PVM. In order to achieve this, it explores the core concepts found in the PVM literature, and draws key connections to the smart city literature. This data is supported through semi-structured interviews with smart city experts. The aim is to understand the potential value of smart city concepts beyond simple optimisation of city processes and cost cutting. This paper concludes that there are conceptual connections between the PVM paradigm and the smart city. It argues that the types of projects adopted, and their success, are inseparable from the political paradigm within which they are undertaken. As such, it takes the view that adopting the PVM paradigm could support the successful delivery of smart cities, predominantly through the ability to understand value beyond the optimisation of systems. Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract Proceedings of 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability Atlantic Press Stockholm, Sweden Smart cities, public value management, leadership, information marketplaces, sustainability 24 8 2014 2014-08-24 https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/ict4s-14/13463 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability (ICT4S 2014) COLLEGE NANME Education COLLEGE CODE EDUC Swansea University 2022-12-18T17:46:07.5398201 2018-08-14T15:45:09.0951695 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Education and Childhood Studies Ellie Cosgrave 1 Theo Tryfonas 2 Tom Crick 0000-0001-5196-9389 3 0043393-11092018065538.pdf ict4s2014_submission93_cameraready.pdf 2018-09-11T06:55:38.4600000 Output 177419 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2018-09-11T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
spellingShingle |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective Tom Crick |
title_short |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
title_full |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
title_fullStr |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
title_sort |
The Smart City from a Public Value Perspective |
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200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99 |
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200c66ef0fc55391f736f6e926fb4b99_***_Tom Crick |
author |
Tom Crick |
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Ellie Cosgrave Theo Tryfonas Tom Crick |
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Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract |
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Proceedings of 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability |
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2014 |
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Swansea University |
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Atlantic Press |
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https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/ict4s-14/13463 |
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description |
This paper explores whether it is useful to view the fundamental ideas behind the smart city concept through the lens of the 'Public Value Management' (PVM) paradigm. It investigates how appropriate ICT investment in cities might be articulated and valued through the concept of PVM. In order to achieve this, it explores the core concepts found in the PVM literature, and draws key connections to the smart city literature. This data is supported through semi-structured interviews with smart city experts. The aim is to understand the potential value of smart city concepts beyond simple optimisation of city processes and cost cutting. This paper concludes that there are conceptual connections between the PVM paradigm and the smart city. It argues that the types of projects adopted, and their success, are inseparable from the political paradigm within which they are undertaken. As such, it takes the view that adopting the PVM paradigm could support the successful delivery of smart cities, predominantly through the ability to understand value beyond the optimisation of systems. |
published_date |
2014-08-24T03:54:39Z |
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1763752730054098944 |
score |
11.037056 |