Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research

Urban Living Labs (ULL) are sites that allow different urban actors to design, test and learn from socio-technical innovations. In this article, I investigate the epistemological roots of ULL, claiming that this new instrument in the realm of urban planning strongly relies on action research,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Diana Soeiro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2021-06-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/97054
id doaj-c194783204894242b3a090eaefc9694a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c194783204894242b3a090eaefc9694a2021-06-10T13:20:57ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172021-06-01Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action researchDiana Soeiro0Institute of Social Sciences - University of Lisbon Urban Living Labs (ULL) are sites that allow different urban actors to design, test and learn from socio-technical innovations. In this article, I investigate the epistemological roots of ULL, claiming that this new instrument in the realm of urban planning strongly relies on action research, a methodology designed in the 1940s. I explore to what extent ULL and action research are different, identifying past obstacles of action research to design more successful ULL. This paper establishes that ULL are a key element to implement social innovation and that social innovation should lead technological innovation and the recent smart city model to promote smart sustainable cities. The article was prepared in the aftermath of the project “ROCK” (2017–2020) on cultural heritage as a driver for urban regeneration, where ULL played a central role being highly relevant in the context of urban regeneration policies. Key findings support that ULL can contribute to finding a balance between top-down and bottom-up strategies and its comparative qualitative analysis would improve the methodology. Moreover, public and private cooperation should be encouraged and government should lead and act as a key player in innovation strategies. Lastly, geography can contribute to these new challenges by framing past approaches, projecting the future of cities, and finding ways to make them become a reality. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/97054
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diana Soeiro
spellingShingle Diana Soeiro
Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Diana Soeiro
author_sort Diana Soeiro
title Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
title_short Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
title_full Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
title_fullStr Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
title_full_unstemmed Smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
title_sort smart cities and innovative governance systems: a reflection on urban living labs and action research
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Urban Living Labs (ULL) are sites that allow different urban actors to design, test and learn from socio-technical innovations. In this article, I investigate the epistemological roots of ULL, claiming that this new instrument in the realm of urban planning strongly relies on action research, a methodology designed in the 1940s. I explore to what extent ULL and action research are different, identifying past obstacles of action research to design more successful ULL. This paper establishes that ULL are a key element to implement social innovation and that social innovation should lead technological innovation and the recent smart city model to promote smart sustainable cities. The article was prepared in the aftermath of the project “ROCK” (2017–2020) on cultural heritage as a driver for urban regeneration, where ULL played a central role being highly relevant in the context of urban regeneration policies. Key findings support that ULL can contribute to finding a balance between top-down and bottom-up strategies and its comparative qualitative analysis would improve the methodology. Moreover, public and private cooperation should be encouraged and government should lead and act as a key player in innovation strategies. Lastly, geography can contribute to these new challenges by framing past approaches, projecting the future of cities, and finding ways to make them become a reality.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/97054
work_keys_str_mv AT dianasoeiro smartcitiesandinnovativegovernancesystemsareflectiononurbanlivinglabsandactionresearch
_version_ 1721384851403177984