Badania nad inteligentnymi miastami z punktu widzenia bibliologii i informatologii
Mariusz Luterek
Afiliacja: Instytut Informacji Naukowej i Studiów Bibliologicznych Uniwersytet Warszawski, Polska
Abstrakt
CEL/TEZA: Celem artykułu jest scharakteryzowanie badań prowadzonych w zakresie tzw. inteligentnych miast (smart cities) z punktu widzenia bibliologii i informatologii, na podstawie dostępnej literatury naukowej.
KONCEPCJA/METODY BADAŃ: Na podstawie analizy literatury opisane zostały takie zagadnienia, jak: koncepcja inteligentnego miasta, jej przeorientowanie z technologii na obywatela, rola inteligentnego zarządzania w mieście, biblioteki publiczne jako część infrastruktury wiedzy oraz wkład bibliologii i informatologii w aktualny stan wiedzy.
WYNIKI I WNIOSKI: Inteligentne miasto, jako pole badawcze, nadal pozostaje w fazie kształtowania. Liczba publikacji na ten temat, jak również ich zakres są ograniczone. Bibliologia i informatologia była dotychczas w tym obszarze zaangażowana w bardzo ograniczonym stopniu, natomiast pozostała literatura odnosi się sporadycznie do bibliotek publicznych. Nieliczne próby powiązania bibliologii i informatologii z omawianym polem badawczym napotykały na problem braku literatury. Najważniejszym dotychczas zrealizowanym projektem dotyczącym tego zagadnienia było badanie przeprowadzone przez naukowców z Instytutu Informacji Naukowej Uniwersytetu Heinrich-Heine w Düsseldorfie (Niemcy).
ORYGINALNOŚĆ/WARTOŚĆ POZNAWCZA: Wartość poznawcza tego artykułu wynika z tego, iż dotychczas opublikowano bardzo niewiele prac szczegółowo odnoszących się do omawianego tematu, których autorami byliby informatolodzy i bibliolodzy, w efekcie czego rola bibliotek w tzw. inteligentnych miastach pozostaje w zasadzie w literaturze naszej dyscypliny niepodjętym tematem. Niniejszy artykuł jest pierwszą taką próbą.
Słowa kluczowe
Biblologia i informatologia; Biblioteka publiczna; Inteligentna biblioteka; Inteligentne miasto
Bibliografia
Barth, J., Fietkiewicz, K., Gremm, J., Hartmann, S., Ilhan, A., Mainka, A., Meschede, C., Stock, W. (2017). Informational Urbanism. A Conceptual Framework of Smart Cities [online]. Proceedings of the 50th Hawaii International Conference on System Science (HICSS-50). Waikoloa Village, Hawaii, USA. [16.05.2018] http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41496
Basri, M., Yusof, Z. M., Zin, N. A. M. (2012). Information Policy: The Diminishing Role of Library. International Journal of Humanities and Social Science, 2(19), 317–327.
http://ojs.sbp.pl/index.php/zin/$$$call$$$/grid/users/author/author-grid/add-author?submissionId=381
Castells, M. (1989). The Informational City: Economic Restructuring and Urban Development. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.
Chourabi, H., Nam, T., Walker, S., Gil-Garcia, R. J., Mellouli, S., Nahon, K., Pardo, T.A., Scholl, H. J. (2012). Understanding Smart Cities: An Integrative Framework [online]. In 45th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (2289–2297). [16.05.2018] https://www.researchgate. net/publication/254051893_Understanding_Smart_Cities_An_Integrative_Framework; DOI: 10.1109/HICSS.2012.615
Dameri, R. P. (2013). Searching for a Smart City Definition: a Comprehensive Proposal. International Journal of Computers & Technology, 11(5), 2544–2551.
Dameri, R. P. (2017). Smart City Implementation. Cham: Springer International Publishing AG.
Effing, R., Groot, B. P. (2016). Social Smart City: Introducing Digital and Social Strategies for Participatory Governance in Smart Cities. In: H. J. Scholl, O. Glassey, M. Janssen, B. Klievink, I. Lindgren, P. Parycek, D. Sa Soares (eds.), Electronic Government: Proceedings of the 15th IFIP WG 8.5 International Conference, EGOV 2016. Guimarães, Portugal: Springer International Publishing.
Franz, P. (2008). From University Town to Knowledge City: Strategies and Regulatory Hurdles in Germany. In: T. Yigitcanlar, K. Velibeyoglu, S. Baum (eds.), Knowledge-Based Urban Development: Planning and Applications in the Information Era (101–115). IGI Global.
Giffinger, R., Fertner, C., Kramar, H., Kalasek, R., Pichler-Milanović, N., Meijers, E. (2007). Smart Cities: Ranking of European Medium-Sized Cities. Vienna: Delft University of Technology.
Gil-Castineira, F., Costa-Montenegro, E., Gonzalez-Castano, F., López-Bravo, C., Ojala, T., Bose, R. (2011). Experiences inside the Ubiquitous Oulu Smart City. Computer, 44(6), 48–55.
Hastings, A., Bailey, N., Bramley, G., Croudace, R., Watkins, D. (2014). “Managing” the Middle Classes: Urban Managers, Public Services and the Response to Middle-Class Capture. Local Government Studies, 40(2), 203–223. DOI: 10.1080/03003930.2013.815615
Houghton, K., Foth, M., Miller, E. (2013). The continuing relevance of the library as a third place for users and non-users of IT: the case of Canada Bay. The Australian Library Journal, 62(1), 27–39.
Johnson, I. M. (2012). Smart Cities, Smart Libraries, and Smart Librarians [online]. In: Shanghai International Library Forum. Shanghai, China. [16.05.2018] http://eprints.rclis.org/20429/
Kumaresan, C., Swrooprani, B. (2013). Knowledge Sharing and Factors Infuencing Sharing in Libraries — A Pilot Study on the Knowledge Sharing Attributes of the EducationCity Library Community in Qatar. Journal of Information & Knowledge Management, 12(1), 1–13.
Lyon Declaration on Access to Information and Development (2014). [online] IFLA. [16.05.2018] https://www.lyondeclaration.org/
Mainka, A., Hartmann, S., Orszullok, L., Peters, I., Stallman, A., Stock, W. G. (2013). Public Libraries in the Knowledge Society: Core Services of Libraries in Informational World Cities. Libri, 64(4), 295–319. DOI: 10.1515.libri-2013–0024
Mainka, A., Khveshchanka, S. (2012). Digital Libraries as Knowledge Hubs in Informational Cities. [online] In: Libraries in the Digital Age (LIDA), Proceedings Vol. 12. Zadar: University of Zadar. http://ozk.unizd.hr/proceedings/index.php/lida/article/view/6/96
Manville, C., Cochrane, G., Cave, J., Millard, J., Pederson, J., Thaarup, R. (2014). Mapping Smart Cities in the EU. Brussels: Directorate General for Internal Policies, European Parliament.
Martini, L. (2016). Knowledge Sharing in a Creative City. Procedia Computer Science, 99, 79–90. DOI: 10.1016/j.procs.2016.09.102
Mitchell, W. J. (2003). Me++: The Cyborg Self and the Networked City. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
Nam, T., Pardo, T. A. (2011). Conceptualizing Smart City with Dimensions of Technology, People, and Institutions. [online] 12th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research (Dg.o 2011). College Park, MD, USA: ACM. [16.05.2018] https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=2037556.2037602
National Library Board (2018). [online] [14.05.2018] https://www.nlb.gov.sg/
Negre, E., Rosenthal-Sabroux, C., Gascó, M. (2015). A Knowledge-Based Conceptual Vision of the Smart City. Proceedings of the 48th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-48). Washington, DC: IEEE Computer Society.
Obama, B. (2009). Transparency and Open Government. Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies. [online]. [16.05.2018] https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/transparency-and-open-government
Ojo, A., Dzhusupova, Z., Curry, E. (2015). Exploring the Nature of Smart Cities Research Landscape. In: R. J. Gil-Garcia, T. A. Pardo, T. Nam (eds.), Smarter as the New Urban Agenda: A Comprehensive View of the 21st Century City (1–27). Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag.
Peters, I., Hartmann, S., Mainka, A. (2013). Social Media Use and Outreach of Selected Public Libraries in Informational World Cities. In: Proceedings of the Second Association for Information Science and Technology ASIS&T European Workshop (79–93)
Polderman, M., Duijnhoven, H. van, Huysmans, F. (2014). Community Building for Public Libraries in the 21st Century: Examples from The Netherlands. [online] [16.05.2018] https://www.ifla.org/files/assets/public-libraries/publications/community_building_for_public_libraries_in_the_21st_century_polderman_et_al.pdf
EIFL (2016). Public Libraries Advancing Community Development in Europe [online]. Electronic Information for Libraries, [12.07.2018], http://www.eifl.net/system/files/resources/201603/europe_summaries-final-web.pdf
Scholl, H. J., Scholl, M. (2014). Smart Governance: A Roadmap for Research and Practice. [online] In: iConference 2014 Proceedings (163–176). [16.05.2018] https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/47408/060_ready.pdf?sequence=2DOI: 10.9776/14060
Schuler, D. (2002). Digital Cities and Digital Citizens. In: M. Tanabe, P. Van den Besselaar, & T. Ishida (Eds.), Digital Cities (71–85). Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag.
Stock, W. G. (2011). Informational Cities: Analysis and Construction of Cities in the Knowledge Society. Journal of American Society for Information Science and Technology, 62(5), 963–986. DOI: 10.1002/asi.21506
Tabuchi, T. (2013). Agglomeration in World Cities. Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences, 77, 299–307. DOI: 10.1016/j.sbspro.2013.03.088
Tan, M. (1998). Plugging into the Wired World: Perspectives from the Singapore. Information Communication & Society, 1(3), 217–245. DOI: 10.1080/13691189809358968
Vlacheas, P., Giaffreda, R., Stavroulaki, V., Kelaidonis, D., Foteinos, V., Poulios, G., Demestichas, P. (2013). Enabling Smart Cities through a Cognitive Management Framework for the Internet of Things. IEEE Communications Magazine, 51(6), 102–111.
Webster, C. W. R., Leleux, C. (2018). Smart Governance: Opportunities for Technologically-Mediated Citizen Co-production. Information Polity, 23, 95–110. DOI: 10.3233/IP-170065
Zygiaris, S. (2011). Smart City Reference Model: Assisting Planners to Conceptualize the Building of Smart City Innovation Ecosystem. Journal of the Knowledge Economy, 2(2), 217–231.
Afiliacja: Instytut Informacji Naukowej i Studiów Bibliologicznych Uniwersytet Warszawski, Polska
Biogram:
Mariusz Luterek, PhD, is Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw (Department of Information Studies; Faculty of Journalism, Information and Book Studies). He is the author of many publications on e-government, including the book: e-Government. Public information systems (2010). He was a leader of the project “Libraries as intermediaries in access to public information and services” funded by the National Science Centre of Poland.
Contact to the Author:
m.luterek@uw.edu.pl
Department of Information Studies
Faculty of Journalism, Information and Book Studies, University of Warsaw
Nowy Świat 69
00-927 Warszawa
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Uznanie autorstwa - Użycie niekomercyjne - Bez utworów zależnych 4.0 Międzynarodowe