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Title The frontier of digital opportunity: Smart city implementation in small, rural and remote communities in Canada
ID_Doc 35859
Authors Spicer, Z; Goodman, N; Olmstead, N
Title The frontier of digital opportunity: Smart city implementation in small, rural and remote communities in Canada
Year 2021
Published Urban Studies, 58, 3
DOI 10.1177/0042098019863666
Abstract Studies of 'smart cities' in Canada primarily focus on large cities but not small, rural and remote communities. As a result, we have a limited understanding of the incentive structures for smaller, remote and rural communities to pursue smart city development. This knowledge deficit is concerning, since the introduction of technology can hold a number of unique benefits for these communities, including easier connections to the rest of Canada and large urban centres, reputation building, improved service delivery and enhanced opportunities for residents. Drawing upon localised forms of knowledge creation, policy development theories, adoption and local competition literature and primary interviews with private and public officials, we examine the challenges and opportunities of 'smart city' implementation through case studies of small and rural municipalities in Annapolis Valley in Nova Scotia and a remote community, Iqaluit, Nunavut. We find that collaboration is essential for rural and remote pursuit of smart city development and is necessary to counteract the limitations of capacity, scale and digital divides. Challenges aside, however, the primary rationale for adoption of smart city technology remains the same regardless of size: enhanced quality of life for residents and sustained community health.
Author Keywords Annapolis Valley; Canada; Iqaluit; rural; smart city
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
EID WOS:000485632900001
WoS Category Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
Research Area Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
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