مقاله انگلیسی شهرهای هوشمند و تغییر رفتار
ترجمه نشده

مقاله انگلیسی شهرهای هوشمند و تغییر رفتار

عنوان فارسی مقاله: شهرهای هوشمند و تغییر رفتار
عنوان انگلیسی مقاله: Smart cities and behavioural change: (Un)sustainable mobilities in the neo-liberal city
مجله/کنفرانس: ژئوفوروم - Geoforum
رشته های تحصیلی مرتبط: عمران، جغرافیا
گرایش های تحصیلی مرتبط: مهندسی حمل و نقل، برنامه ریزی شهری، جغرافیای سیاسی
کلمات کلیدی فارسی: شهرهای هوشمند ، تحرکات ، تغییرات آب و هوایی ، تغییر رفتار
کلمات کلیدی انگلیسی: Smart cities, Mobilities, Climate change, Behaviour change
نوع نگارش مقاله: مقاله پژوهشی (Research Article)
نمایه: Scopus - Master Journals List - JCR
شناسه دیجیتال (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.06.010
دانشگاه: University of Exeter, UK
صفحات مقاله انگلیسی: 10
ناشر: الزویر - Elsevier
نوع ارائه مقاله: ژورنال
نوع مقاله: ISI
سال انتشار مقاله: 2021
ایمپکت فاکتور: 3.901 در سال 2020
شاخص H_index: 116 در سال 2020
شاخص SJR: 1.584در سال 2020
شناسه ISSN: 0016-7185
شاخص Quartile (چارک): Q2
فرمت مقاله انگلیسی: PDF
وضعیت ترجمه: ترجمه نشده است
قیمت مقاله انگلیسی: رایگان
آیا این مقاله بیس است: خیر
آیا این مقاله مدل مفهومی دارد: ندارد
آیا این مقاله پرسشنامه دارد: ندارد
آیا این مقاله متغیر دارد: ندارد
آیا این مقاله فرضیه دارد: ندارد
کد محصول: E15556
رفرنس: دارای رفرنس در داخل متن و انتهای مقاله
فهرست مطالب (انگلیسی)

Highlights
Abstract
Keywords
Introduction
Being smart: technological utopianism in an age of climate change
Engaged smart transport
Discussion: Beyond smart behaviourism
Conclusion: The limits of behavioural solutionism
CRediT authorship contribution statement
Declaration of Competing Interest
Acknowledgement
References

بخشی از مقاله (انگلیسی)

ABSTRACT
The smart cities agenda has garnered considerable interest recently as the spread of mobile technologies and notions of ‘big data’ have opened possibilities for promoting greater efficiencies in urban metabolisms. This has been particularly prominent in the realm of environmental sustainability, where smart technologies have been viewed as a way of reducing traffic congestion and delivering energy efficiencies. Key to these aspirations is the way in which technologies are seen to interact with human behaviour and how digital technologies can promote behavioural change through the provision of ‘better’ information. However, smart city programmes adopt a particular intellectual and pragmatic framing of behavioural change that we argue is fundamentally narrow and unambitious, raising concerns about how behavioural science is mobilised, by whom and its potential to promote sustainable urban futures. First, we propose that the focus in smart city narratives on quantitative data and insights from ‘big data’ is methodologically narrow and is representative of a highly individualised, libertarian paternalist perspective that privileges rationalistic and atomised understandings of behaviour. Second, we argue that the logic of smart cities leads city governments towards a focus on superficial change and the language of ‘encouraging’ shifts in individual behaviour that presents a distraction from the urgent need to reconfigure city infrastructures for low carbon forms of living. Third, we explore how such behavioural change approaches are fundamentally didactic and often lapse into assuming that publics are the passive receivers of ‘smarter’ information rather than active citizens who can question, campaign and present alternative visions to those of corporate-government interests. In this way, we argue that the suffusing of the smart cities and behavioural change agendas act as a neo-liberal distraction to the ways in which cities can develop to support the priorities of human and ecological wellbeing.