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Issue title: Smartness in Governance, Government, Urban Environments and the Internet of Things
Guest editors: Hans Jochen Scholl
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Anthopoulos, Leonidas G.a; * | Reddick, Christopher G.b
Affiliations: [a] Department of Business Administration, TEI of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece | [b] Department of Public Administration, The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: Leonidas G. Anthopoulos, Department of Business Administration, TEI of Thessaly, 41110 Larissa, Greece. E-mail:[email protected]
Abstract: Smart cities have been evolving since their early appearance in late 1990s from metropolitan-wide Information and Communication Technology (ICT) based solutions to today's innovations - not necessarily based on ICT - that utilize city resources and improve local everyday life. This paper attempts to answer two research questions: (a) Does e-government research provide the appropriate theoretical capacity consisting of terms and frameworks that define smart city? and (b) Is e-government research evolution able to provide the appropriate theoretical capacity to deal with smart city challenges? To answer these two research questions this paper follows a multi-methods approach comprising of (a) retrospective literature review (27 interdisciplinary journals, from 1997-2015 that publish smart city works are examined with regard to e-government and smart city) and define the key-areas of study (i.e., e-government in smart city etc.); and (b) prospective Delphi study (involving 16 experts in both e-government and smart city domains from prestigious universities, organizations, and cities across the globe), which identify action areas (i.e., livability and co-design) and measures for future e-government research contribution to the smart city. The results of this study shed light on existing gaps, interrelations, and reciprocities between e-government research and smart city and define an agenda for future research.
Keywords: Smart city, e-government, information and communications technology (ICT), Delphi, urbanism
DOI: 10.3233/IP-150371
Journal: Information Polity, vol. 21, no. 1, pp. 99-117, 2016
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