Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title An Integrated Conceptual Framework to Assess Small and Rural Municipalities' Readiness for Smart City Implementation: A Systematic Literature Review
ID_Doc 36426
Authors Mashau, NL; Kroeze, JH; Howard, GR
Title An Integrated Conceptual Framework to Assess Small and Rural Municipalities' Readiness for Smart City Implementation: A Systematic Literature Review
Year 2021
Published
Abstract The term smart city is commonly used to describe the use of various types of digital infrastructure and technologies to collect data in order to provide information that can be used to manage resources efficiently and provide a better standard of living for citizens. Smart city technology could be also used to solve the education challenges of continuous urbanization, thereby facilitating the international sustainable development goal of quality education and lifelong learning opportunities for all communities (cf. linps://sdgs.un.org/goals). Many cities have used information and communication technologies (ICTs) to enable smart city concepts. Most small and rural municipalities struggle to manage their resources, which results in service delivery problems. A smart city intervention may help small and rural municipalities to curb these problems, but there is slow implementation of this concept in these municipalities due to the lack of an integrated framework focusing on the assessment of small and rural municipalities' readiness for smart city implementation. The aim of this research is to address this gap in information systems (IS) knowledge. A systematic literature review is employed to provide an in-depth and critical summary of existing research relevant to the research question. Various concepts are synthesized into a holistic, integrated conceptual framework to assess small and rural municipalities' readiness towards smart city implementation. The framework can be used to assess small and rural municipalities to gauge their readiness level towards smart city implementation of a smart city initiative. In addition, municipal authorities can use this framework to identify the required components and key stakeholders for any smart city initiatives. This paper provides the foundation from which future empirical research can progress.
PDF

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
45572 Mashau, NL; Kroeze, JH; Howard, GR Key Factors for Assessing Small and Rural Municipalities' Readiness for Smart City Implementation(2022)Smart Cities, 5, 4
45042 Mashau, NL; Kroeze, JH Challenges that affect smart city implementation in small and rural municipalities(2023)South African Journal Of Information Management, 25, 1
37184 Chatterjee, S; Kar, AK Readiness of Smart City: Emerging Economy Perspective(2018)
40591 Raaijen, T; Daneva, M Depicting the Smarter Cities of the Future: A Systematic Literature Review & Field Study(2017)
40185 Bjorner, T How are smart cities perceived by project leaders and participants in an ongoing project: the challenge of evaluating smart cities(2018)
39178 Kopackova, H; Libalova, P The Rise Of Smart Cities - Result Of Global Problems Or Technology Challenge?(2017)
39391 Agbali, M; Trillo, C; Fernando, T; Oyedele, L; Ibrahim, IA; Olatunji, VO Towards a Refined Conceptual Framework Model for a Smart and Sustainable City Assessment(2019)
44998 Allahar, H What are the Challenges of Building a Smart City?(2020)Technology Innovation Management Review, 10, 9
36395 Wijayasinghe, S; Sachitra, V Smart city development and improvement of quality of life in urban cities of Sri Lanka: citizen-centric approach(2024)
45272 Adnan, YM; Hamzah, H; Daud, MN; Dali, MM; Alias, A A framework for reconciling user requirements and actual provision for Smart City implementation(2016)
Scroll