Akıllı Şehir İstanbul Örneği : Katılımcı ve Uzlaşmacı Süreçlerle Kentsel Bölgelerin ve Muadillerinin Kıyaslanması
Yazar
Bektaş, Hakan
Saldanlı, Arif
Baypınar, Mete Başar
Şeker, Murat
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Since the 1990s, the Greater Municipality of Istanbul has been investing in intelligent, digital services and
supporting infrastructures, while at the same time Istanbul has started to become an important centre for ICT
technologies. Recently, the efforts of the municipality and the private stakeholders are significantly up-scaled
as the city has become an important international business, transportation and digital hub. One of the most
recent efforts to tackle the city’s management challenges is the “Smart City Istanbul Program” which covers
a range of activities from developing a Smart City benchmark model to the assessment of the metropolitan
city with a specific Maturity Model.
The Greater Municipality has recently developed an assessment and monitoring model for Istanbul’s
development as an international financial sector. The development of other models focusing on particular
issues is also on the agenda. In a way, the municipality is trying to establish an information-rich intelligence
base that focuses on strategic priority areas. These efforts may contribute to the adaptation of the global and
national metropolitan agenda that pushes metropolitan governments to establish evidence-based policies and
integrated management supported by indicator systems that allow benchmarking city-regions.
The development of such intelligence capabilities poses significant challenges. Meticulous encouragement of
participatory processes by the Greater Municipality of Istanbul itself within its own activities should
facilitate the diffusion of its emerging knowledge assets to other stakeholders, thereby creating a dynamic
and complex environment of urban intelligence building. Enhancing the quality of participatory processes is
thus very important.
The paper provides information on the participatory methodological approach used in the establishment of
the Smart City Assessment and Monitoring Model, developed by the authors in collaboration with the
Greater Municipality of Istanbul and its affiliate ISBAK. It also discusses the benefits and challenges
associated with the Smart City Assessment Models based on a rich literature survey. The approach employed
is particularly aimed at avoiding empty signifier problems, feeding participatory processes with rich
information, establishing trust among stakeholders, avoiding fuzziness and indecisiveness, and enabling the
production of a small set of mutually agreed and selected benchmark indicators which can later successfully
inform maturity models.Lessons learned are: the involvement of specialised practitioners in the Smart City domain in disseminating
local information into the process; the use of a layered participatory process to enable evaluation and
agreement on a large set of indicators in a relatively short time; and the co-presence of these two processes to
help avoid empty signifier problems. The paper suggests that it is possible to tackle the unique challenges
associated with Smart City development activities. Enabling repetitive benchmarking processes makes it
possible to challenge rapid technological change and achieve convergence. Layered participatory processes
work better when practitioner teams also see potentials in collaboration. Also third, feedback mechanisms
should be provided at different layers of participatory processes as they enhance decision-making processes.
Bağlantı
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/5325https://archive.corp.at/cdrom2020/papers2020/CORP2020_86.pdf
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