Author: |
Bria, F., Blankertz, A., Fernández-Monge, F., Gelhaar, J., Grafenstein, M. v., Haase, A., Kattel, R., Otto, B., Sagarra Pascual, O., & Rackow, L. |
Published in: |
|
Year: |
2023 |
Type: |
Working paper |
Cities are laboratories for democratic and sustainable innovation; they wield normative
and regulatory power coupled with infrastructural capacity and close connection to
citizens. They govern and shape the urban spaces in which citizens meet and interact.
This urban space is becoming digital, which creates a new form of infrastructure: urban
data understood as data collected in the public space or generated in the context of
city procurement or financing. Urban data is essential to understanding and shaping
how citizens can make use of the public space and how governments can make
decisions and act in the public interest: Which needs are currently unmet by public
transport? What do we need for a more effective mobility transformation? Where do
we need more spaces for local communities and vulnerable groups? How can we
provide better and more innovative public services?
Cities have only begun to tap into the potential of urban data. Although they make
some of the data they collect available as open data to the public, most urban data is
controlled by private companies that operate in the urban space and are reluctant to
share this data. Yet, if urban data is understood as a common, cities should be able to
access it to ensure it is put to the service of creating public value. This situation
demands developing and using a set of legal tools, organisational capabilities and digital
public infrastructures that will enable cities to ensure that urban data benefits not only
a few but society at large. This also requires capacity, policies, and skills to create and
benefit from such public value.
In this report, we set out to combine insights from many years of data sharing
experience with the specific insights gained from an experiment on urban data sharing
in the City of Hamburg. On this basis, we have developed a range of recommendations.
They are intended to enable cities and communities to access and use urban data to
gain better democratic control of urban space and provide more effective public
services.