Creative Urban Regions: Harnessing Urban Technologies to Support Knowledge City Initiatives
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Creative Urban Regions: Harnessing Urban Technologies to Support Knowledge City Initiatives

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Release Date: February, 2008|Copyright: © 2008 |Pages: 390
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-838-3
ISBN13: 9781599048383|ISBN10: 1599048388|EISBN13: 9781599048413
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Description & Coverage
Description:

In a knowledge economy urban form and functions are primarily shaped by global market forces rather than urban planning. As the role of knowledge in wealth creation becomes a critical issue in cities, urban administrations and planners need to discover new approaches to harness the considerable opportunities of abstract production for a global order.

Creative Urban Regions: Harnessing Urban Technologies to Support Knowledge City Initiatives explores the utilization of urban technology to support knowledge city initiatives, providing scholars and practitioners with essential fundamental techniques and processes for the successful integration of information technologies and urban production. Converging timely research on a multitude of cutting-edge urban information communication technology issues, this Premier Reference Source will make a valuable addition to every reference library.

Coverage:

The many academic areas covered in this publication include, but are not limited to:

  • City knowledge
  • Community Development
  • Creative initiatives
  • Digital Governance
  • Economic Development
  • E-Inclusion
  • ICT Applications
  • Implications of ICT
  • Information systems perspective
  • Informational citizenship
  • Knowledge cities
  • Knowledge economy and society
  • Knowledge Transfer
  • Knowledge workers and quality of life
  • Knowledge-based urban development
  • Land use regulation
  • Municipal ICT policy goals
  • Social and human capital
  • Social Networking
  • Tacit and codified knowledge
  • Urban ICT policy
  • Urban Innovation
  • Urban resource innovations
  • Urban services and infrastructure
  • Urban technologies
  • Urbanization
Reviews & Statements

This book is divided into four sections, each one dealing with selected aspects of information and communication technologies and creative urban regions.

– Tan Yigitcanlar, Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Designed for use by those involved with urban planning and environments, Creative Urgan Regions shows how the creation of wealth in a region must be coupled to effective urban planning.

– Book News Inc. (2008)
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Editor/Author Biographies
Tan Yigitcanlar (www.urbanizm.org; tan.yigitcanlar@qut.edu.au) has a multi-disciplinary background and almost two decades of work experience in private consulting, government, and academia. Currently a researcher at the School of Urban Development, Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia) the main focus of his research is promoting knowledge-based urban development and sustainable transportation. He has been responsible for a wide variety of teaching, training, and capacity building programmes on varied topics in urban planning, environmental science, policy analysis, and information and communication technologies in Turkish, Japanese, and Australian universities. Professor Yigitcanlar is co-editor of Knowledge-based urban development: planning and applications in the information era (2008) and Creative urban regions: harnessing urban technologies to support knowledge city initiatives (2008).
Koray Velibeyoglu (korayvelibeyoglu@iyte.edu.tr) is a researcher in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Izmir Institute of Technology, Izmir, Turkey. His teaching interests and methods cover project-based courses in urban planning and design as well as urban information and communication technology policy for planning. The main focus of his research clusters around urban information and communication technology policy-making and knowledge-based development processes. He is an expert in understanding networked urbanism and the impacts at the metropolitan and local level and the role of information and communication technologies in sustainable urban development. Professor Velibeyoglu is co-editor of Knowledge-based urban development: planning and applications in the information era (2008) and Creative urban regions: harnessing urban technologies to support knowledge city initiatives (2008).
Scott Baum (s.baum@griffith.edu.au) is trained in economics and sociology and currently holds the position of deputy director in the Urban Research Program, Griffith University (Brisbane, Australia). His research focuses on understanding the economic and social outcomes of change across the settlement system. Most recently he has been involved in studying the impacts of local labor markets on the individual socio-economic outcomes. His most recent book, Fault Lines Exposed, was published by Monash University e-press in 2005. Professor Baum is co-editor of Knowledge-based urban development: planning and applications in the information era (2008) and Creative urban regions: harnessing urban technologies to support knowledge city initiatives (2008).
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