2020
DOI: 10.1109/access.2020.2982737
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E-Government Insights to Smart Cities Research: European Union (EU) Study and the Role of Regulations

Abstract: The recent evolution of smart cities research has initiated a holistic dialogue for the integration of past initiatives promoting e-government at European Union Level. At the same moment Future Smart Cities research, is justified as a multidisciplinary and inter-disciplinary research domain. Within this context this research work provides insights for the integration of Economics, E-government, Information Systems, and Social Sciences. The study addresses the e-government process as one of the most important a… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…Second, academic analysis of the drivers of citizens' acceptance of e-gov IoT technologies is largely neglected in previous ICT and citizens' behavior research. This study addresses the gap in the literature by identifying the success factors of public service for e-gov and smart government [207]- [209]. Third, this study promotes public trust in using IoT services offered by governments as a way to originate individual participation in the co-creation process.…”
Section: A Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Second, academic analysis of the drivers of citizens' acceptance of e-gov IoT technologies is largely neglected in previous ICT and citizens' behavior research. This study addresses the gap in the literature by identifying the success factors of public service for e-gov and smart government [207]- [209]. Third, this study promotes public trust in using IoT services offered by governments as a way to originate individual participation in the co-creation process.…”
Section: A Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Thus, policymakers need to pay attention to those other information sources and to their quality and roles [83]. The results also indicate that PU is largely dependent on PEOU; hence, UEAS practitioners should take the appropriate actions aimed at establishing bidirectional feedback and comment channels with the citizens (i.e., students) to identify and analyze the latter's requirements [84]. This would enable managerial decision makers to redesign the UEAS in ways that would improve ease of use for students.…”
Section: B Practical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…However, Agenda 2020 requires technologies, especially emerging ones such as IoT, artificial intelligence and mobile cloud, as key success factors (Kolesnichenko et al, 2021). These technologies are configured around digital government initiatives, which can strengthen social inclusion by providing free and fast access to public services, which are the models of good practices that are very important for efficient policies in smart cities (Lytras and S erban, 2020). Finally, it is important to consider that the strategies for achieving the SDGs can generate tension between them, given that some, for example, advocate economic growth, the strengthening of industries and others for the protection of the environment.…”
Section: Smart Governance Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%