Le società in-house: contributo allo studio dei principi di auto-organizzazione e auto-produzione degli enti locali
In: Pubblicazioni del Dipartimento di Economia e diritto, Sapeinza, Università di Roma
In: Sezione di diritto dell'economia 29
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In: Pubblicazioni del Dipartimento di Economia e diritto, Sapeinza, Università di Roma
In: Sezione di diritto dell'economia 29
In: The Italian Journal of Public Law, 2017, Vol. 15, No 1, p. 80
SSRN
In: The American journal of economics and sociology, Band 75, Heft 2, S. 415-455
ISSN: 1536-7150
AbstractThis article introduces an innovative, experimental, adaptive, and iterative approach to creating legal and institutional frameworks based on urban polycentric governance to foster commons‐based urban policies. First, the theory of urban/local governance is introduced, based on an urban co‐governance matrix. A new type of regulatory system is then described that aims at transforming people in distributed nodes of collective action. Citizens and institutions can be myriad nodes of designing and problem solving in the public interest. Urban co‐governance aims at taking advantage of this galaxy of networks. I then examine design principles and a methodology to implement the urban co‐governance matrix. The concluding question concerns the need for a new research methodology to investigate the ongoing process of state transformation and institutional genesis at the urban level.
In: American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Band 75, Heft 2 (March, S. 2016
SSRN
In: Italian Journal of Public Law, 2015, Vol. 7, Issue 1, p. 170
SSRN
In: Pubblicazioni del Dipartimento di economia e diritto, Sezione di diritto dell'economia, Sapienza, Università di Roma 37
In: Biblioteca di testi e studi
In: Labsus, il laboratorio per la sussidiarietà
In: Biblioteca di testi e studi 757
In: Labsus, il laboratorio per la sussidiarietà 2
In: Urban and industrial environments
In: The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovation, Forthcoming
SSRN
SSRN
In: Sociologia del lavoro, Heft 152, S. 155-173
In: Sociologia del Lavoro, 152/2018
SSRN
In: Law & ethics of human rights, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 263-299
ISSN: 1938-2545
Abstract
Internet of Things, Internet of Everything and Internet of People are concepts suggesting that objects, devices, and people will be increasingly interconnected through digital infrastructure that will generate a growing gathering of data. Parallel to this development is the celebration of the smart city and sharing city as urban policy visions that by relying heavily on new technologies bear the promise of efficient and thriving cities. Law and policy scholarship have either focused on questions related to privacy, discrimination, security, or issues related to the production and use of big data, digital public services. Little or no attention has been paid to the disruptive impact of technological development on urban governance and city inhabitants' rights of equal access, participation, management and even ownership, in order to understand whether and how technology can also enhance the protection of human rights and social justice in the city.
This Article proposes complementing the technological and digital infrastructure with a legal and governance infrastructure, the Internet of Humans, by construing and injecting in the policy framework of the city the principle of Tech Justice. Building on a literature review and from an analysis of selected case studies, this Article stresses the dichotomy existing between the market-based and the society-based applications of technology, the first likely to increase the digital divide and the challenges to human rights in the city, the latter bearing the promise to promote equal access to technology in the city. The main argument advanced by this Article is that the principle of Tech Justice if embedded as an empirical dimension of smart city and sharing city policies can steer their developments in the direction of a more just and democratic city.