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Towards smart, digitalised rural regions and communities – Policies, best practices and case studies

Pekka Leviäkangas, Signe Annie Sønvisen, Diego Casado–Mansilla, Marius Mikalsen, Andrea Cimmino, A. Drosou, Shahid Hussain

2025Technology in Society11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rural communities and regions face specific challenges in terms of thin markets, low population density, and long distances. Also, the demographics of these communities are often skewed towards the elderly, and the socioeconomics is characterized by higher share of low-income populations. While the concept of urban smart communities is quite well established, such as Smart Cities, the concept of smart rural region communities is only beginning to gain scholarly attention. Smart rural communities can be understood as rural areas and communities that build on their existing strengths and assets as well as on developing new opportunities based on the aforementioned. Traditional and new networks and services can be improved by utilizing digital telecommunication technologies, innovations, and better use of data and knowledge to benefit the communities. Investing in both physical and digital connectivity, and building digital environments for innovative services, economic sustainability, jobs, and social capital can be enhanced, thus contributing to active and live rural communities. Consequently, the development of smart rural communities and regions begins to emerge in research. What is becoming evident is that achieving the ambitions of smart rural communities requires not only digital technologies but also innovation of commercial and social services, as well as better digital capabilities and skills to bridge the existing – and in places the widening - divide between rural and urban communities. • Ideas and of Smart Rural Communities have been shadowed by the ideas of Smart Cities. • Smart rural communities play a pivotal role in balanced societal development. • Several case studies demonstrate the diversity of innovative solutions for rural communities. • The issue of bridging the gaps between ’urban’ and ’rural’ is clearly global, but at the same time extremely diversified. • Silver bullet universal policies or measures are yet hard to observe, as the contexts vary.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental planningBest practiceBusinessRegional scienceEconomic geographyEnvironmental scienceGeographyEconomicsManagementSmart Cities and TechnologiesInnovative Approaches in Technology and Social DevelopmentHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis