India - Why Smart Cities, Need Smart Citizens..?
by Mr.A. Shankar, JLL India
Without smart citizens, the Smart City proposals will hold good only
for documentation – not implementation
Traditionally, initiatives like Smart City are indicators of developed
economies. A developing country will become a successfully developed country
when its citizens also upgrade and update themselves. In India, the Smart City
initiative is in full swing, with the top 20 smart cities stepping into the
next stage of implementation. The Smart City mission focuses on the technology
overlaying the basic infrastructure that will be built in right places and in
sufficient quantities in the cities.
However, the most vital aspect – the citizens who live and work in
these cities – must be integral to the implementation process as well. The
success of Indian Smart Cities is firmly vested in Smart Citizens.
A smart citizen is one who has civic sense and respects the law. Some
of unanswered questions about Smart Cities as far as citizen participation is
concerned are:
Will people obey the traffic rules, drive within speed limits and
desist from jumping signals?
Will they put pedestrians first and leave space for them?
Will they respect elders and give way to senior citizens?
Will they park their vehicles at designated lots and not anywhere else?
Will they maintain hygiene not only their flats but also in the common
areas of their apartment complexes?
Will they throw garbage only in bins and practice source segregation
during garbage disposal?
Awareness about smart solutions plays crucial role in developing true
smart citizens. Though the local authorities of our smart cities will make
substantial investments in smart solutions, they cannot skimp on efforts to
raise citizen awareness on the efficient usage of these solutions and services.
For example, energy saving cannot be achieved merely with smart meters
in the home. In order to reduce energy consumption and save money on bills,
consumers need to not only monitor their energy use but also make an effort to
change the whole family’s daily energy usage behaviour. This would include
shifting to energy-efficient appliances, reducing TV time and switching off
electrical appliances when not in use, especially during peak periods.
A smart city connects people with their environment and city to create
more efficient and optimal relationships between available resources,
technology, community services, and events in the urban fabric. This connection
is a tool that links the implementation of the smart city and the proposed
technology. JLL India’s Strategic Consulting team advocates citizen
participation as the major success factor in implementing the smart solutions
in a city, and successfully demonstrated this while preparing the proposal for
Bhubaneshwar and Chennai (among the top 20 smart cities, with Bhubaneshwar
ranked #1). The aspects to be followed to make the Smart City mission
successful through Smart Citizens across India:
Citizen Participation: Most of developed cities ensure that citizens
participate in every aspect from cleaning to safety requirements. Citizen
participation ensures citizen satisfaction, which in turn ensures maximum
efficiency of the proposed technology. Good governance is always measured by
the extent to which it involves its citizens in the overall decision-making
process.
In an increasingly complex world, citizens’ inputs are a critical
resource for policy-making. Good decision-making requires the knowledge,
experiences, views and values of the public. The participation of citizens has
become simpler through online Government portals. Such participation reduces
the conflict of opinions and makes implementation easier. Smart citizens need
to be fully inclusive, innovative and sustainable.
Joint Engagement Of Citizens And Government: Political will and the
technical capacity to engage citizens in policy making, or providing accurate
data on government performance, are the hallmarks of developed democracies.
Though making policies for a city’s growth and comprehensive development is
important, a smart city acknowledges that policies alone are not enough to
reach their goals. It solicits support from its citizens and local stakeholders
to make this happen.
Citizens are called upon to jointly take responsibility and engage in
the process. Building social capital is essential to ensure that smart citizens
acquire the capabilities and skills to meet the challenges of the future. Only
then does a city become ‘future ready’.
Technology Support: Technology has given the world new dimensions;
globally, citizens are becoming technology-oriented in every aspect concerning
their comfort, convenience and safety. Technology support has become an
essential factor for the growth of a city and its citizens.
The use of innovative information and communications technology (ICT)
applications, smartphones and smart fixtures are all part of the process of
making smart citizens. When city dwellers use the Internet to make smarter,
more informed choices, cities become smarter too. The right approach towards
the Smart City mission involves a balance between technological and
non-technological approach.
The ICT platform is the best tool to bridge the current gap between the
Government and citizens. The Smart City concept necessarily emphasizes the
inclusion of ICT solutions as part of its entire proposal. Going forward, such
a system will be robust and sustainable. There are lot of apps and online
platform available to facilitate citizen participation, some of which are the
Swachh Bharat Clean India mobile app, IPaidABribe.com, Safecity India, Next
Bengaluru and Kumbhathon. Cities become more dynamic by the use of such
platforms.
Already, the Government has launched the necessary tools to help citizens
participate proactively in Smart City mission. These include street
campaigning, education programmes in schools and colleges, media advertisements
and hoardings, consultation programmes with Government officials, online
participation etc.
MyGov.in is an excellent example of ICT integrating and increasing the
efficiency of citizen engagement. All policy-level decisions will directly
involve citizens’ opinions. This platform will make the system more transparent
and act as an interactive forum between citizens and the Government. It allows
citizens to post their comments and suggestion on any proposal and also
includes different types of participation (i.e., voting, raising public
awareness, advocating for an issue, monitoring political processes) that will
best promote democratic development in different contexts. It is a technology
that is created to purposefully connect citizens’ groups and amplify their
voices.
In addition, private technology developers are continuously exploring
smart technologies from smart mobiles to smart furniture and appliances,
marketing them at affordable prices to reach to all categories of people. This
not only helps in cost saving but also connecting with globally-employed smart
technologies. Moreover, specially formed societies in residential colonies and
corporate companies across India are now taking up initiatives like cleaning
the neighbourhood, roads and water bodies, tree plantation, electronic waste
recycling, etc. This is the kind of motivation required of citizens to
participate in taking the Smart City initiative.
To ensure a greater share of online participation channels such as
through smartphone applications and social media, municipalities needs to
invest in smart people – not merely in smart technologies. Only then will tools
like smartphones and mobile applications have the potential to revolutionize
city governance and contribute to the making of people-centric Smart Cities.
To repeat:
Smart cities need to have inclusive, innovative and sustainable smart
citizens. Smart cities are directly proportional to smart citizens
The smarter a city is, the greater is its dependence on equally
efficient, smart citizens. Without smart citizens, the Smart City proposals
will hold good only for documentation – not implementation
A city is a reflection of how its citizens perceive it, and a smart
city actually is how a city behaves as an innovative ecosystem. There is no such thing as a standard template
or a magic all-in-one smart city application. Allowing citizens to become
active in the process of city design and building enabling ‘bottom-up’
innovation and collaborative ways of developing systems out of many
loosely-joined parts will help in implementing Smart City successfully.
The post Why Smart Cities Need Smart Citizens appeared first on Real
Estate Trends 2016, News, Insights.
About
the author..
Mr. A. Shankar is National Director & Head (Operations) – Strategic
Consulting at JLL India.
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