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Prevailing approaches and practices of citizen participation in smart city projects: Lessons from Trondheim, Norway

Abstract

Citizen participation has become an important aspect in the design of smart cities. This paper investigates the frame and modality of citizen participation in a European Horizon2020 smart city project, +CityxChange, in Trondheim. +CityxChange aims at enabling citizen participation and co-creation in the transition to a positive energy city. The question is “what are the prevailing approaches and practices in relation to citizen participation amongst the key actors involved in +CityxChange? Which structures and processes have inhibited or fostered the participation mechanisms (e.g., for, by, and of people) and practices in Trondheim?” Through participatory observations and interviews with key local actors and citizens, we found that the focus of +CityxChange on efficiency and creating innovative solutions “for” people in partnership with the private sector has disturbed the “by” and “of” people mechanisms of participation. Citizens’ power and roles are not delegated to challenge or replace the project’s predetermined issue or plan. The anchorage of the project outside of the formal administrative structure has caused other functional barriers that inhibit citizen participation, rather than facilitate it. This paper discusses the causal relationships between these interconnected barriers and suggests how authorities can possibly overcome them.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Savis Gohari
  • Daniela Baer
  • Brita Fladvad Nielsen
  • Elena Gilcher
  • Welfry Zwestin Situmorang

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Community / Architecture, Materials and Structures
  • University of the Ruhr, Bochum
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Date

20.04.2020

Year

2020

Published in

Infrastructures

Volume

5:36

Issue

4

Page(s)

1 - 28

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository