TY - BOOK AU - Frischmann,Brett M. AU - Madison,Michael J. AU - Sanfilippo,Madelyn R. TI - Governing smart cities as knowledge commons T2 - Cambridge studies on governing knowledge commons SN - 9781108938532 (ebook) AV - TD159.4 .F75 2023 U1 - 307.760285 23/eng/20221214 PY - 2023/// CY - Cambridge, United Kingdom, New York, NY, USA PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Smart cities KW - Security measures KW - Data privacy KW - Internet governance KW - Information commons KW - Public administration N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 17 Feb 2023); Smart cities and knowledge commons / Michael J. Madison, Madelyn Rose, Sanfilippo, and Brett M. Frischmann -- The challenge for cities of governing spatial data privacy / Feiyang Sun and Jan Whittington -- Open governments, open data / Anjanette Raymond, and Inna Kouper; Open Access N2 - The rise of 'smart' - or technologically advanced - cities has been well documented, while governance of such technology has remained unresolved. Integrating surveillance, AI, automation, and smart tech within basic infrastructure as well as public and private services and spaces raises a complex set of ethical, economic, political, social, and technological questions. The Governing Knowledge Commons (GKC) framework provides a descriptive lens through which to structure case studies examining smart tech deployment and commons governance in different cities. This volume deepens our understanding of community governance institutions, the social dilemmas communities face, and the dynamic relationships between data, technology, and human lives. For students, professors, and practitioners of law and policy dealing with a wide variety of planning, design, and regulatory issues relating to cities, these case studies illustrate options to develop best practice. Available through Open Access, the volume provides detailed guidance for communities deploying smart tech UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108938532 ER -