Overview of the Resource
The document “Digital Humanism and Smart Cities” is a research paper authored by Hannes Werthner, Carlo Ghezzi, Jeff Kramer, Julian Nida‑Rümelin, and Moshe Y. Vardi. It builds on the Vienna Manifesto on Digital Humanism and critiques the techno‑solutionist approach prevalent in many smart‑city initiatives. The authors argue for integrating human dignity, democratic governance, and ethical principles into urban technology strategies, proposing a framework aimed at making cities truly “smart” for all residents.
The Techno‑Solutionist Problem
The paper identifies a core tension: technology is often treated as an end rather than a means to improve human life. This manifests in surveillance‑heavy infrastructures, algorithmic decision‑making that can amplify biases, corporate‑driven platforms that concentrate data control, and digital exclusion of citizens lacking access or skills. These issues undermine autonomy, privacy, and social equity in urban environments.
Democratic Technology Governance
A key principle advocated is democratic oversight of technology decisions. The authors call for citizen participation in choices about data collection, algorithm design, and deployment of public‑space technologies. Such governance aims to align technological development with the common good, preventing narrow commercial interests from dominating smart‑city projects.
Meaningful Data Consent
The paper stresses that consent mechanisms must be transparent, simple, and revocable without loss of essential services. Current lengthy terms of service are deemed insufficient. Providing citizens clear control over personal data is presented as essential for respecting individual rights within smart‑city frameworks.
Algorithmic Transparency
Algorithms influencing public services—such as traffic management or social‑service allocation—should be understandable, auditable, and accountable. The authors recommend open algorithmic standards to enable independent scrutiny and to prevent discriminatory outcomes, ensuring that automated systems serve all community members fairly.
Digital Inclusion
Ensuring equitable access to smart‑city benefits is another cornerstone. The authors propose measures like public digital infrastructure, training programmes, and maintaining non‑digital alternatives to bridge the digital divide across age, income, disability, and literacy lines.
Enhancing Human Capabilities
The framework shifts focus from system optimisation to enhancing human capabilities, drawing on Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum’s capability approach. Technologies should empower residents to participate in civic life, access education, health, and economic opportunities, preserve cultural diversity, and support environmental sustainability without overburdening disadvantaged groups. 🇪🇺 Implications for European Smart Cities Given the European Union’s GDPR and commitments to social inclusion, the authors argue European cities are well‑positioned to lead in human‑centred smart‑city models. The paper suggests that aligning smart‑city initiatives with human rights and democratic values can set a global standard for sustainable, inclusive urban development.
