Litcius/Paper detail

Urban Smartness and City Performance: Identifying Brazilian Smart Cities through a Novel Approach

Ana Cristina Fachinelli, Tan Yiğitcanlar, Jamile Sabatini‐Marques, Tatiana Tucunduva Philippi Cortese, Débora Sotto, Bianca Libardi

2023Sustainability17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While smart city transformation is a remarkably popular topic among urban policymakers across the globe, there is little evidence on how to evaluate a city’s smartness level accurately. This study aims to bridge this knowledge gap by applying a novel assessment framework to a case study context and generating useful insights. To achieve this aim, the study evaluates the smartness levels of 27 Brazilian state capital cities through the indicators of productivity and innovation, livability and well-being, sustainability and accessibility, governance and planning, and connectivity and innovation. This urban smartness analysis is conducted through a smart city assessment framework that brings up three categories of smart city performance types—i.e., leading, following, and developing. The findings of the analysis revealed that the common characteristics of cities with leading smartness performance are having: (a) a strong innovation ecosystem; (b) Specific legislation for developing entrepreneurship; (c) Training opportunities for skilled labor; and (d) Conditions for knowledge-based development and digital transformation offerings and readiness. The analysis identified the smartest cities in Brazil as follows: Florianópolis, São Paulo, Vitória, Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Brasília, Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro, and Cuiabá. This study offers insights from the application of a novel method in the Brazilian context for the local authorities to consider adopting for smart city performance and progress analyses and subsequently making necessary interventions to transform their smart city policy and practice to realize their desired goals.

Topics & Concepts

Smart cityContext (archaeology)BusinessSustainabilityUrban planningGlobeEnvironmental planningEconomic growthRegional scienceGeographyComputer scienceEngineeringCivil engineeringEconomicsInternet of ThingsComputer securityOphthalmologyMedicineArchaeologyBiologyEcologySmart Cities and TechnologiesInnovative Approaches in Technology and Social DevelopmentHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis