Smart Cities and Economic Development

Pooneh Famili
Civic Analytics & Urban Intelligence
3 min readOct 31, 2016

The goal: urban sustainable development and economic growth. Opportunities abound for businesses and entrepreneurs to be part of this global urban revitalization effort. The question is, what are the management risks of more smart cities?

In a very recent paper — The Real-Time City? Big-Data and Smart Urbanism developed by Rob Kitchin, a researcher at the National University of Ireland Maynooth, County Kildare, Ireland, raises three concerns regarding managing smart cities:

1. Technocratic governance:

Smart-city proposals are based on an approach that is narrow in scope, reductionist and functionalist, derived from a limited set and various particular kinds of data. They fail to consider the wider effects of culture, politics, policy, governance and capital that shape city life and how it unfolds. At the same time, command systems centralize power and decision making into a select set of offices and make elements of data publicly available.

2. “Corporatization” of city government:

Smart-city agendas and associated technologies are being heavily promoted by several the world’s largest software services and hardware companies. This creates several concerns: that public services are administered for private profit; that it creates a technology lock-in that shackles cities to specific technology platforms and vendors; and that there will be “one-size-fits-all smart-city-in-a-box” solutions that take little account of the uniqueness of places, people and cultures and straitjackets city administrators.

3. Panoptic cities:

Big data and data-control centers that integrate and bind data streams together work toward moving various systems into a single, panoptic vantage point. This single vantage point raises “the specter of a Big Brother society based on a combination of surveillance and ‘dataveillance.’”

Kitchin is not recommending the abolition of smart cities. Rather, he suggests a balance: that smart city technology be complemented with a range of other “instruments, policies and practices that are sensitive to the diverse ways in which cities are structured and function.” He argues for citizens’ rights to privacy when in today’s world of big or small data — privacy is a necessity hard to find.

In a thought-provoking essay by Anthony Townsend, the research director at the Silicon Valley-based Institute for the Future, and senior research fellow at New York University’s Rudin Center for Transportation Policy and Management. He wonders about the sheer “bugginess” of smart cities, in which he states that:

Smart cities are almost guaranteed to be chock full of bugs, from smart toilets and faucets that won’t operate to public screens sporting Microsoft’s ominous Blue Screen of Death. But even when their code is clean, the innards of smart cities will be so complex that so-called normal accidents will be inevitable. The only questions will be when smart cities fail, and how much damage they cause when they crash. But, perils will multiply only if we continue to do business as usual.

What do we take away from this as Townsend’s suggestion for moving forward?

“We need to question the confidence of tech-industry giants, and organize the local innovation that’s blossoming at the grassroots into a truly global movement.”

“We need to push our civic leaders to think more about long-term survival and less about short-term gain, more about cooperation than competition. Most importantly, we need to take the wheel back from the engineers, and let people and communities decide where we should steer.”

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