๐ Imagine... People-Powered Smart Cities in the Pacific ๐บ
๐ก Imagined Endstate:
A future where Pacific cities grow not just smarter—but more inclusive, grounded in local wisdom, cultural dignity, and the lived realities of their people. These cities harness technology not to surveil, but to serve.
๐ Source:
Goh, D. (2025, March 20). Reimagining People-Centered Smart Cities. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.Link.
๐ฅ What’s the Big Deal:
As cities across the globe digitize rapidly, Pacific Island cities must avoid the trap of copying industrialized “smart” models that centralize control and marginalize the vulnerable. This Carnegie-UN-Habitat consultation highlights a critical reframe: cities must be designed not for people, but with them.
The UN-Habitat Smart City Guidelines shift the paradigm—calling for equitable access to services ๐, community-led data governance ๐งญ, inclusive digital infrastructure ๐, climate-resilient design ๐ฟ, and cultural preservation ๐งต. Rather than pushing privatized, top-down systems, the guidelines center local knowledge and bottom-up innovation—recognizing that smart solutions must be culturally resonant ๐ญ, economically just ๐ฐ, and environmentally sustainable ๐️.
In the Pacific, this means investing in systems where elders are part of digital planning ๐ง๐ฝ, youth shape future cityscapes ๐ฉ๐ฝ๐ป, and Indigenous communities own the data they generate. It’s a direct challenge to the extractive “surveillance urbanism” many global cities are adopting. The Pacific can model cities that are not only connected—but compassionate, collaborative, and rooted in ancestral wisdom. A people-powered city is the smartest kind of city we can imagine.
#SmartCities, #DigitalJustice, #PacificUrbanization, #UNHabitat, #PeopleCenteredDesign, #IndigenousInnovation, #Intersectional, #RICEWEBB, #IMSPARK,
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