|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This book considers and examines the concept of a Smart City in the
context of improving the quality of life and sustainable
development in Central and Eastern European cities. The Smart City
concept has been gaining popularity in recent years, with
supporters considering it to be an effective tool to improve the
quality of life of the city’s residents. In turn, opponents argue
that it is a source of imbalance and claim that it escalates the
problems of social and economic exclusion. This book therefore
assesses the quality of life and its unsustainability in Central
and Eastern European cities within the context of the Smart City
concept and from the perspective of key areas of sustainable
development. Using case studies of selected cities in Central and
Eastern Europe and representative surveys of Polish cities, this
book illustrates the process of creating smart cities and their
impact on improving the quality of life of citizens. Specifically,
the book investigates the conditions that a Smart City has to meet
to become sustainable, how the Smart City concept can support the
improvement of the residents' quality of life, and how Central and
Eastern European countries create smart city solutions. Containing
both theoretical and practical content, this book will be of
relevance to researchers and students interested in smart cities
and urban planning, as well as city authorities and city
stakeholders who are planning to implement the Smart City concept.
This book identifies the impact of internal and external
stakeholders on the implementation of sustainable development
policies in the coal mining sector in Europe and the Commonwealth
of Independent States. The book assesses what activities and
conditions need to be improved so that sustainable development
policies can be more effectively and efficiently implemented. With
a specific focus on the hard coal and lignite mining sectors, it
examines a broad range of case studies from Eastern European
countries and the Commonwealth of Independent States, including
Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Kazakhstan, Germany, Spain, France and the
United Kingdom, among many more. Beginning with an introduction to
sustainable development and stakeholder theory, Part II then
examines internal stakeholders, including owners, managers,
employees and trade unions. Part III examines external
stakeholders, touching upon those directly related to the mining
industry, such as customers and mining enterprises, and those not
directly associated such as local and regional communities and
environmental organisations. The book concludes by proposing a
model approach to the management of stakeholders involved in mining
enterprises, focusing on improving the process of implementing
sustainable development in the mining sector and strengthening the
effects of this process. This book will be of great interest to
students and scholars of the extractive industries, natural
resource management and policy and sustainable development.
|
You may like...
Ont
Wessel Pretorius
Paperback
R191
Discovery Miles 1 910
Cranford
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
Paperback
R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
The Morris
Helen Blakeman
Paperback
R291
Discovery Miles 2 910
|