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Smart Communities and Knowledge Sharing as Main Tools to Achieve Common Purposes

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Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ((LNTCS,volume 12253))

Abstract

As reaction to globalization and the loosing of landmark caused by the huge data and information availability in the “net” and by the mass media proliferation, the research of an identity and the need of a feeling of belonging is stronger and stronger in today society. The information and communication technologies (ICT’s) - which initially helped to erase socio-territorial boundaries and to strengthen a feeling of belonging to a single community in which we are all interlinked and interdependent – have now become the main tools for building local, and smart, communities. These, in addition to being places of confrontation, are also and above all places for sharing subjective and objective knowledge (and therefore for continuous learning). There are several experiences going towards this direction (i.e. creating shared spaces built around shared values that emerge to deal with problems felt as “public”) ranging from analytical, investigative, critical and vindictive dimensions to proposals, monitoring, evaluation, deliberation, on the most varied topics: from the abandonment of public buildings (such as confiscated property), to security and the protection of territories. These are thus defined spaces in which, through self-organization and civic hacking dynamics, problems that are perceived as public are discussed and public goods are co-produced. These last are intended not as goods produced or owned by a public administration, but as the result of a process of social interaction. Digital technologies in this contest are tools by which social practices of re-appropriation and collective redefinition of public goods are nourished.

This paper is the result of the joint work of the authors. For Italian evaluation purposes Luigi Mundula takes responsibility for Sects. 2 and 4, and Flavia Marzano for Sects. 1 and 3.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Examples of such applications related to Italian slow tourism include: slow itineraries in Italian parks (http://www.parks.it/itinerari/Eindex.php); GiroParchi, which shows nature trails through the Gran Paradiso National Park and the Mont Avic Natural Park in Val d'Aosta, Italy (http://www.giroparchi.it/it/map/wrap); the Web viewer Contrat de Rivière Haute-Sûre, (http://www.crhs-sig.eu/mapserver_crhs/index.php?lang=en); Via Alpina, centered on a series of slow tourist routes along the Alps (http://www.via-alpina.org); the Swiss national portal for slow tourism (http://map.wanderland.ch/?lang=en); one web viewer on the most interesting slow tourism routes in Europe (http://maps.peterrobins.co.uk/routes.html) and another on the Via Francigena (http://www.viefrancigene.org/en/map).

  2. 2.

    RIA refers to a web programming environment that provides an intuitive user interface and access to powerful widgets and tools (e.g. Google Web Toolkit and Adobe FLEX).

  3. 3.

    Examples of this type in the field of slow tourism are MapMyHike (http://www.mapmyhike.com), a crowdsourcing platform that collects hiking routes from people (also loaded via a mobile app); PisteCiclabili, where users can upload traces of Italian cycle paths (http://www.piste-ciclabili.com); GPSaCavallo, focused on horse trails (http://www.gpsacavallo.com); Wikiloc, which offers free GPS routes and waypoints that members can upload and share and which is integrated with Google Maps and Google Earth (https://it.wikiloc.com).

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Mundula, L., Marzano, F. (2020). Smart Communities and Knowledge Sharing as Main Tools to Achieve Common Purposes. In: Gervasi, O., et al. Computational Science and Its Applications – ICCSA 2020. ICCSA 2020. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 12253. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58814-4_31

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58814-4_31

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