Towards a governance dashboard for smart cities initiatives: a system of systems approach

Author(s):  
Ben Payne ◽  
Lee Oon Ling ◽  
Alex Gorod
Author(s):  
Georg Weichhart ◽  
Jürgen Mangler ◽  
Alexander Raschendorfer ◽  
Christoph Mayr-Dorn ◽  
Christian Huemer ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
pp. 403-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeid Nahavandi ◽  
Doug Creighton ◽  
Michael Johnstone ◽  
Vu T. Le

Author(s):  
Kazuyuki Mori ◽  
Toshiyuki Miyamoto ◽  
Shoichi Kitamura ◽  
Yoshio Izui

Author(s):  
Francesca Culasso ◽  
Sara Giovanna Mauro

The aim of this chapter is to analyze the business model of an innovative company in the context of a smart city. Specifically, this research investigates key components and challenges concerning the operationalization of a business model originally conceived to be sustainable. This chapter relies on the analysis of the empirical evidence collected at the organizational level by combining different data sources, including official and internal documents, face-to-face interviews, and questionnaires. It is thus designed to contribute to the lively debate on sustainability by providing empirical evidence and shedding light on the operationalization of the concept of sustainable business model. Further, in light of the smart context where the company operates, this research paves the way for further investigation into the potential win-win collaboration between innovative companies and smart cities to foster sustainability consistent with a systems approach to the topic.


Author(s):  
Scott E. Page ◽  
Jon Zelner

This chapter advocates a complex adaptive system of systems approach to understanding population-level processes in population health. A complex adaptive system consists of diverse, interacting adaptive entities whose aggregated behaviors result in emergent, system-level patterns and functionalities. A complex adaptive system of systems consists of multiple, connected complex systems. The connections can be hierarchical, horizontal, or a mixture of the two. The authors provide basic definitions, describe common tools of analysis, and introduce illustrative cases. For example, increased obesity levels have no single cause, nor do they arise from a single system. Instead, they arise from the interactions of multiple systems that operate at various levels of scale. Genetics and epigenetics play roles, as do nutrition, general health, advertising, infrastructure, social norms, exercise levels, and, as recent evidence suggests, the ecology of colonies of gut bacteria. Each of these contributors can be modeled as a complex adaptive system and the whole as a system of systems. Similarly, population-level disease outbreaks can be decomposed into separate systems, each with unique dynamics.


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