[EGOV LIST] Call for papers - DG.O. 2023 Track 5. Design Models and Platforms for Trust Enhancing Smart Cities

ZIOZIAS CHRISTOS cziozias at uth.gr
Mon Dec 19 08:54:21 PST 2022


dg.o 2023: TRACK 5. Design Models and Platforms for Trust Enhancing
Smart Cities

Dear colleague,

are you researching on topics such as smart city? sustainability?
circularity? people-centered cities? smart transformation? smart
government/governance? smart city management? city and open/big data?
urban innovation? industry 4.0?

-----------------------------

CALL FOR PAPERS - dg.o 2023: TRACK 5. Design Models and Platforms for
Trust Enhancing Smart Cities

(https://smartcitytrack.wordpress.com/ |
https://www.facebook.com/SmartCityTrack/)

 

dg.o 2023: 24th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research

Theme: Together in the unstable world: Digital government and solidarity

Gdansk University of Technology, Gdansk, Poland

11-14 July 2023

 

https://dgsociety.org/dgo-2023 and
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dgo2023

Twitter handle: #dgo2023

 

The Digital Government Society (DGS) will hold the 24th Annual
International Conference on Digital Government Research – dg.o 2023 –
in Gdansk, Poland, with a special focus on digital government and
solidarity. The conference main organizer is the Department of
Informatics in Management, Faculty of Management and Economics, Gdansk
University of Technology, Poland.
Crisis upon crisis, from pandemic and war to climate change to
democratic breakup, government institutions face rapidly changing
service demands, unpredictable geopolitical environment, and
challenges to their own legitimacy. They cannot address such crises
alone without mobilizing adequate social response, even supported by
advanced technology. In turn, such a response requires citizens to
feel (and act upon) their responsibility toward each other, e.g.,
changing one’s attitudes, behaviors, and lifestyles for collective
well-being. It requires solidarity – the recognition that “we are all
in this together”. While different notions of “we” produce different
variants of solidarity – universal, civil, social, or political, all
variants are about relationships, intentionality and sacrifice.
The conference aims to put the concept of solidarity at the center of
the digital government debate. To this end, it focuses on how digital
government can enhance solidarity and, conversely, how solidarity can
enhance the efficacy of digital government in responding to global
crises and local constituency demands.
 

TRACK 5. Smart Cities: Design Models and Platforms for Trust Enhancing
Smart Cities

Track chairs:

Leonidas Anthopoulos, University of Thessaly, Greece

Soon Ae Chun, City University of New York

 
Smart city utilizes the ICT to enhance living of local communities and
make city operations sustainable against current and future
challenges. The recent COVID-19 pandemic rapidly had to transition
cities to virtual spaces where the ICT became the platform for work,
socialization and transactions. However, this transformation did not
utilize the smart city infrastructure designed with purpose for
overall planning. The post-pandemic period finds cities to define
their future strategies for transformation and innovations to serve
citizens and businesses with the smart city infrastructure equipped
with more advanced intelligent technologies to make cities more
resilient to adversities and to promote better life. Citizens and the
private sectors will be heavily rely on the smart city infrastructure.

This track invites research and practices in inclusive, circular and
resilient smart cities, addressing topics such as intelligence for
circularity and resilience in cities; enhancing diverse digital skills
toward digital maturity; making the citizens data and digital service
prosumers; bringing the local community closer to the local digital
and circular transformation and generate new jobs; enabling
collaboration and governance that make everyone understand its role
and commit in this transition that transforms smart cities to
intelligent spaces, circular and resilient to adverse events.

In this environment, trust on the smart city is essential for engaging
citizens, communities, and businesses. The advanced technologies used
in the smart cities include AI, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, are
being applied to autonomous vehicles, drones, blockchain, intelligent
utility management, precision healthcare, adjustable traffic
management, public safety monitoring, crisis management, industrial
and social robotics, and crime surveillance, etc. These algorithmic
intelligence embedded in the smart cities are fueled by continuous
data collections and super-powered analytics, and presents various
benefits and unprecedented challenges. Different levels of governments
adopting the superintelligent technology-based smart cities need to
consider the impacts on citizens and connected communities, local and
global. They require to consider trust enhancing aspects to avoid the
calamities of basic rights of citizens and to achieve ultimate goals
of smart cities.

In this track, we investigate the trust enhancing approaches for these
advanced technologies from different perspectives to carefully design
and implement more secure, privacy-respecting, inclusive, fair, just,
and equitable smart city infrastructure. We call for design models and
implementation innovations of the smart city infrastructure that
consider the trust dimensions, ranging from technology governance,
trust-enhancing regulations and policies, to social approaches, to
technical approaches, but not limited to these.

Recommended Topics:

- smart city and trust;
- smart city sustainability and circularity;
- smart city inclusiveness and resilience;
- smart city key infrastructure and platforms;
- smart city implementation strategies and success indicators;
- smart government;
- smart city service innovations and impacts;
- smart digital citizen identity;
- citizen’s behavior modeling;
- citizen centricity, engagement, industry 4.0 technologies;
- digital transformation, smart and connected communities;
- governance and policy issues of intelligent machines and man-machine
interactions;
- security, ethics and privacy issues;
- novel sharing and interactions in intelligent cities;
- smart city infrastructure and standards; applications and
collaborations based on the IoT and, smart sensors;
- Big Data analytics;
- civic technology movement, and intercity and intergovernmental
collaborations;
- Machine learning, Deep Learning, AI, Blockchain, AR/VR and Robotics
for cities and governments

 

IMPORTANT DATES

January 20, 2023: Papers are due
March 31, 2023: Author notifications)
April 25, 2023: Final version of manuscripts due in EasyChair
May 1, 2023: Early registration begins
May 20, 2023: Early registration closes
 

SUBMISSION TYPES AND FORMATS

Submissions need to follow the guidelines established for the dg.o
conference. Detailed instruction and ACM conference proceedings template
will be available on conference website http://dgsociety.org/dgo-2023/
under “submission guidelines”.

 
Submission Site: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dgo2023



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