Next Article in Journal
From School to Work: Improving Graduates’ Career Decision-Making Self-Efficacy
Previous Article in Journal
Quantitative Assessment for the Dynamics of the Main Ecosystem Services and their Interactions in the Northwestern Arid Area, China
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Scientific Landscape of Smart and Sustainable Cities Literature: A Bibliometric Analysis

Faculty of Organization and Management, Silesian University of Technology, Roosevelt 32 Str., 41-800 Zabrze, Poland
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2020, 12(3), 779; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030779
Submission received: 21 December 2019 / Revised: 9 January 2020 / Accepted: 19 January 2020 / Published: 21 January 2020
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Urban and Rural Development)

Abstract

:
The smart sustainable city (SSC) is a concept created in response to problems and challenges arising from rapid urbanization. This is a relatively new term that is developing dynamically, which is confirmed by the growing number of publications over recent years. For this reason, this article presented an up-to-date comprehensive bibliometric analysis to describe and assess the scientific landscape of smart and sustainable cities literature. The analysis was based on two bibliographic sources—the Web of Science Core Collection and the Scopus database. It covers publications on the SSC, as well as documents describing the smart city (SC) and the sustainable city (SuC) concepts separately. VOSviewer and Biblioshiny were selected as software tools for the bibliometric analysis. Based on the descriptive bibliometric analysis, quantity and quality indicators were determined separately for the SC, SuC, and SSC concepts, while the network analysis mapped and covered the level of multi-faceted scientific cooperation in the field of the SSC research. The analysis results were intended to familiarize scholars and practitioners with the most prolific authors, sources, institutions, and countries in the analyzed scientific field, to identify the most influential research channels and impact from authors, sources, countries, and research topics, to determine major clusters of the SSC research and also to provide valuable information for further investigation.

1. Introduction

A city is a place where a large number of people live and work. It is a human settlement, which differs from others not only by its relatively great size but also by its functions entrusted by public administration authorities. According to the United Nations data, the number of city dwellers has increased significantly over the last century. In 2018, it totaled 55% of the world’s population. It is expected that this percentage will continue to grow (reaching 68% in 2050), which will be the result of the ongoing gradual relocation of residents from rural to urban areas in parallel with the increase in the overall global population. Almost 90% of this increase will occur in peripheral countries [1].
People are moving to urban areas, hoping for better education and better job opportunities and seeking a higher standard of living. The growing number of city dwellers creates many problems and challenges that cities now have to face. These problems and challenges include:
  • growing demand for land designated for urban development, which results in a reduction in green areas and agricultural land,
  • growing environmental threats due to increased air pollution and bigger amounts of liquid and solid waste produced by people living in urban areas,
  • increasing demand for resources (water, food, fossil energy resources, etc.) due to the growing needs of urban residents,
  • increasing demand for public services, such as sanitation, public transport, health care, and education,
  • growing number of vehicles, causing congestion and traffic jams, as well as greater air pollution,
  • increasing the application of new technologies in the development and management of cities, which can improve the living conditions of some city residents, but can also socially exclude those incapable of adopting new solutions.
All these problems and challenges of city life are well-known, and yet people still want to move from rural to urban areas (especially in peripheral countries). In addition, the bigger number of city residents, combined with increased wealth of urban communities, will only aggravate the situation. Therefore, it has become essential to answer the question of how cities should develop and how they should be managed to meet the challenges of urbanization.
Following the sustainable development concept introduced at the end of the 20th century, the concept of sustainable city development was created. According to it, a ‘sustainable city’ (SuC) is a city organized in a way which ‘enables all its citizens to satisfy their own needs and to enhance their well-being without damaging the natural environment or endangering the living conditions of other people, now, or in the future’ [2]. Including the principles of sustainable development in the process of designing, building, and managing cities aims to ensure the economic development of cities and to reduce inequalities between citizens, to improve the quality of life and also the quality of the environment [3]. It should be noted that the United Nations Agenda 2030 for the 11th sustainable development goal (SDG 11) recommends making cities more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive [4].
The growing number of urban residents has caused a significant increase in the demand for urban services, which, in many cases, cannot be sufficiently and effectively provided using the existing infrastructure. For this reason, cities began to search for and introduce new intelligent technologies to fulfill their functions better. This resulted in the implementation of the ‘smart city’ (SC) concept. According to it, a city is smart if it uses clever solutions to thrive and improve the quantity and quality of public services provided to its residents [5,6]. The implementation of new intelligent technologies is considered a key factor in solving urban problems, and for that reason, the United Nations Agenda 2030 in the 9th sustainable development goal (SDG 9) recommends increased application of the information and communication technology (ICT) to build a resilient infrastructure with investments in irrigation, energy generation, and information and communication technologies [4]. However, it should be noted that although the implementation of new technologies can bring many benefits to cities, it can also negatively affect the quality of the environment or the quality of life of inhabitants [7]. It is, therefore, very important to find such innovative solutions and advanced technologies that will allow cities of the 21st century to be both smart and sustainable [8].
The above-mentioned approach has become the pillar of the ‘smart sustainable city’ (SSC) concept. According to it, the ‘smart sustainable city is a city that: (1) meets the needs of its present inhabitants without compromising the ability of other people or future generations to meet their needs, (2) does not exceed environmental limitations in resource sharing and pollution assimilation, and (3) uses new information and communication technologies and advanced technologies to support the tasks entrusted to it’ [9]. The concept has mainly developed in ecologically and technologically advanced countries [10], but given the fact that in the coming years the largest increase in urban areas will take place in peripheral countries, it is important that these countries should be able to benefit from the experience of developed countries in creating smart sustainable cities. Unfortunately, the literature and practice present varied definitions and dimensions of the SSC, which makes it difficult to understand the concept unequivocally. For this reason, it is necessary to conduct a thorough analysis to identify the most interesting research directions of the SSC concept development. Although several articles reviewing the literature on the SSC have been published in recent years, they focus primarily on reviewing the SSC definitions and dimensions [6,10,11], trying to find the answer to a research problem defined in relevant articles [12,13] or carrying out a bibliometric analysis in the field of the SC [14,15,16] or the SuC [17,18], based on a selected single bibliographic database. There are also publications presenting the results of a bibliometric analysis carried out in the field of the SSC [19], but they focus on general results from a few years ago, which undoubtedly needs expansion and updating due to the significant increase in the number of the latest SSC publications. Therefore, this paper presented a comprehensive quantitative evaluation of the SSC scientific landscape, based on the development of the SC and the SuC literature, in particular. The detailed and longitudinal bibliometric analysis of the SSC research filled the gap identified in rigorous, systematic, and objective examination of the global patterns and trends of research in this field from multiple perspectives. It was based on two bibliographic sources: the Web of Science (WoS) Core Collection and the Scopus database. Three types of bibliometric indicators were used: quantity indicators (for measuring productivity), quality indicators (for measuring the impact), and structural indicators (for measuring the connections) [20]. A network analysis (i.e., co-keyword analysis, co-authorship analysis, and co-citation analysis) was also performed, and major clusters of the SSC research were identified.
The results achieved in the analyzed domain would enable researchers and practitioners:
  • to know the most prolific authors, sources, institutions, and countries in the analyzed scientific field,
  • to identify the most influential research channels and impact from authors, sources, countries, and research topics in the SSC literature,
  • to determine how the SSC publications are clustered,
  • to provide valuable information for further investigation and to determine publication strategies.
The structure of this paper is as follows: Section 2 is an overview of the SC, SuC, and SSC definitions. The research methodology is described in Section 3. Section 4 presents the results and discussion of the bibliometric analysis. Finally, Section 5 offers conclusions and indicates possible directions for future research and limitations.

2. Towards Smart and Sustainable City—Literature Review

The SSC concept is derived from the combination of the SC and the SuC. It is conceptually difficult to describe, mainly due to the diversity of definitions of the SC and the SuC. Therefore, to present the essence of the SCC, it is necessary to explain the meaning of the SC and the SuC concepts.
The term ‘smart city’ (SC) was first used in the early 1990s in connection with the growing significance of new information and communications technologies (ICT’s) and modern infrastructures within cities. It has gained greater attention since 2008 due to the launch of the IBM Smarter Planet project [21]. Since then, the concept has evolved, resulting in a variety of SC definitions. Being a multifaceted, wide-ranging, and rather fuzzy notion, it is used in ways that are not always consistent. According to Hall et al. [22], the SC ‘monitors and integrates the conditions of all of its critical infrastructures (…), can better optimize its resources, plan its preventive maintenance activities, and monitor security aspects while maximizing services to its citizens’. Giffinger et al. [23] claimed that the SC is ‘a city well performing in a forward-looking way in economy, people, governance, mobility, environment, and living, built on the smart combination of endowments and activities of self-decisive, independent, and aware citizens’. Harrison et al. [21] considered the SC as ‘an instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent city, connecting the physical infrastructure, the IT infrastructure, the social infrastructure, and the business infrastructure to leverage the collective intelligence of the city’. Kourtit and Nijkamp [24] pointed out that SC is ‘the result of knowledge-intensive and creative strategies, aiming at enhancing the socio-economic, ecological, logistic, and competitive performance’. Yigitcanlar et al. indicated that the SC is ‘an ideal model to build cities based on a systemic approach, which includes sustainable and knowledge-based development activities to generate desired outcomes and future for all humans and non-humans’ [13,25]. It seems to be evident that there is no commonly shared definition of the SC. However, there used to be two mainstream approaches to the concept: the approach based on ICT and technology, in general, and the people-oriented approach [26]. Nevertheless, the SC notion technocentricity has been criticized recently [13], and it is emphasized that the development of the SC should be based on a co-creative approach where citizens and other stakeholders shape SC services in a collaborative manner [27]. It must be noted that several similar terms are often used interchangeably with the smart city. These include: ‘digital cities’, ‘virtual cities’, ‘cyber cities’, ‘networked cities’, ‘intelligent cities’, ‘knowledge cities’, ‘wisdom cities’, ‘ubiquitous cities’, ‘real-time cities’, and ‘hybrid cities’, which combine these names [10]. However, these terms refer to more specific aspects of the city [28]. In this way, the SC concept is wider. It often includes the terms [29] and focuses on other issues [30].
The term ‘sustainable city’ (SuC) also emerged in the early 1990s. As no single definition of ‘sustainable development’ has been accepted, the SuC does not have one common explanation either. In addition, there are several similar notions often used interchangeably, including sustainable urban, city sustainability, urban sustainability, sustainable urban development, sustainable city development. According to Ewers and Nijkamp [31], the SuC is a city, which has the ‘potential to reach qualitatively a new level of socio-economic, demographic, and technological output, which in the long run reinforces the foundations of the urban system’. Girardet [2] claimed that the SuC ‘is organized to enable all its citizens to meet their own needs and to enhance their well-being without damaging the natural world or endangering the living conditions of other people, now, or in the future’. The United Nations defines the SuC as a city, which ‘is built on social development, economic development, environmental management, and urban governance to ensure ‘low ecological footprint’ and eliminate the transfer of economic, social, and environmental hazards to other locations and future generations’ [32]. Hiremath et al. [33] described the SuC as a city that has achieved a balance between urban development and environmental protection. In particular, it is a city that, now and in the future, can satisfy the basic needs of its inhabitants, benefiting all sectors of society [34]. Wang et al. pointed out that the SuC means ‘improving the quality of life in a city, including ecological, cultural, political, institutional, social, and economic components without leaving a burden on the future generations’ [18]. In general, the SuC integrates environmental, economic, and social considerations to achieve goals of sustainable development. It should provide a safe and healthy urban environment where both people and nature can develop. It must be noted that there are several terms similar to a sustainable city, including, for example, ‘eco-cities’, ‘green cities’, or ‘resilient cities’. However, these notions refer to more specific aspects of the city, so SuC seems to be a wider, more complex concept.
The ‘smart sustainable city’ (SSC) is a new phenomenon, and this notion became widespread in the mid-2010s. Being relatively new, the phenomenon has been less explored than the SC and SuC concepts. In general, the SSC is ‘a city that is supported by a pervasive presence and massive use of advanced ICT, which, in connection with various urban domains and systems and with how these intricately interrelate, enables cities to become more sustainable and provide citizens with a better quality of life’ [35]. Dhingra and Chattopadhyay determined the SSC specific goals expected to be accomplished in an adaptable, reliable, scalable, accessible, and resilient manner [36]. Therefore, the SSC represents and involves ‘inherently complex socio-technical systems of all sorts of innovation systems’ [35]. In addition, Bibri [37] described the SSC as ‘a holistic urban development approach, which seeks to explicitly bring together the sustainable city and the smart city as urban endeavors in ways that address and overcome the key shortcomings of both classes of cities in terms of their contribution to the goals of sustainable development’. The above-mentioned definitions indicate that the field of the SSC is inherently interdisciplinary, comprising technological, social, environmental, economic, cultural, and philosophical perspectives. This is due to the fact that it covers multidimensional issues related to the development of sustainability awareness, rapid urban growth, and technological development. However, research on the SSC is in its early stages, and it needs thorough clarification and operationalization of its characteristics. Nevertheless, the SSC means that SC must contribute to sustainability, including the environmental, economic, and social goals of sustainable development. In this regard, Kramers et al. [38] suggested that the SSC concept should be understood ‘as a way of emphasizing initiatives when smartness is (also) used to promote sustainability’. In addition, Höjer and Wangel [9] claimed that the SuC becomes smart when it is supported by ICT.

3. Materials and Methods

The structure of knowledge and the development of research in the fields of smart and sustainable cities were assessed using bibliometric analysis. The analysis covered publications in the SSC field, publications describing the SC concept and the SuC notion separately, as well as publications discussing concepts that some authors connect with SC or SuC, such as the digital city or the green city. The choice of such a scope of the analysis resulted from the fact that the SC and the SuC concepts had a significant impact on the development of the SSC concept, and, therefore, they had to be included in the in-depth analysis of the scientific landscape of the SSC.
The analysis presented in this article was carried out in the following phases:
  • Phase 1: Study design;
  • Phase 2: Data collection;
  • Phase 3: Initial data analysis;
  • Phase 4: Descriptive bibliometric analysis;
  • Phase 5: Network analysis;
  • Phase 6: Conclusions and directions for future research.
In the first phase of the study, online bibliographic databases were reviewed for the possibility of using them for the research presented in this article. Two bibliographic sources were selected: the Web of Science (WoS) Core Collection and the Scopus database. These databases provide reliable and relevant information on scientific work and are most often selected for bibliometric analyses. All types of scientific papers collected in the WoS and Scopus databases were chosen for the analysis. Then, the bibliometric analysis software tools were reviewed. As the intention was to combine information collected in the WoS and Scopus databases, VOSviewer and Biblioshiny were selected as software tools for the bibliometric analysis. In the next step, a list of the search query words and the Boolean operators were identified. Aiming to conduct an in-depth analysis, the following query words were selected:
  • in the extensive scientific field of the SC concept: “smart city/cities”, “intelligent city/cities”, “digital city/cities”, “virtual city/cities” “cyber city/cities”, “networked city/cities”, “knowledge city/cities”, “wisdom city/cities”, “ubiquitous city/cities”, “real-time city/cities”, “hybrid city/cities”;
  • in the extensive scientific field of the SuC concept: “sustainable city/cities”, “sustainable urban”, “resilient city/cities”, “eco-city/cities”, “ecocity/ecocities”, “city sustainability”, “green city/cities”, “urban sustainability”, “sustainable urbanization”, “sustainable city development”, “sustainable urban development”;
  • in the extensive scientific field of the SSC concept: “smart sustainable city/cities”, “sustainable smart city/cities”, “smart and sustainable city/cities”, “sustainable and smart city/cities”, “sustainable and smart urban”, “smart and sustainable urban”, “sustainable development of smart city/cities”, “sustainable development”, “sustainability”.
The words ‘AND’ and ‘OR’ were used as the Boolean operators, resulting in a total of 36 combinations of specific query wording. The lists of query wording instances with relevant Boolean operators are presented in Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3. In the last step of this phase, the time span of the analysis was determined. Initially, no starting publication date was entered in the search. However, due to the fact that the first publication in the analyzed field (regarding the SuC concept) appeared in 1983, the timespan was narrowed down to 1983–2020.
In the second phase of the study, the analysis input data was collected. The final item of the data was retrieved on 30 October 2019 from the WoS and Scopus databases. Various wording combinations in the publication subject (TS) and the publication title (TI) for the WoS database and in the publication TITLE-ABS-KEY and in the publication TITLE for the Scopus database were used to identify scientific publications in the extensive field of the SC, SuC, and SSC concepts. The obtained results are presented in Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3.
The third phase of the study consisted of a preliminary review of the collected data. This was limited to the records directly related to the SC and the SuC. In the next step, the publications included in the identified extensive scientific field of the SSC were screened (i.e., titles and abstracts) to indicate the items directly related to the SSC concept. In addition, the papers defining the SC, SuC, and SSC concepts were selected to show the development of individual concepts and their impact on the development of the SSC concept (this is presented in Section 2).
The database created in this way became the basis for descriptive bibliometric analysis (the fourth phase of the study). The analysis was carried out separately for scientific papers, describing the concepts of the SC, the SuC, and the SSC. For each of these concepts, the number of publications and the total number of citations, the main research areas and research categories, the most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations publishing scientific works were determined. The decision to conduct a separate descriptive analysis for each concept resulted from the fact that the concepts appeared in different years, which affects the number of published articles or the number of citations and makes it difficult to perform a joint analysis of all data.
In the fifth phase of the study, a network analysis was performed. To achieve the purpose of the article, a decision was made to perform the network analysis for the SSC concept data collected from the WoS and Scopus databases. This analysis was conducted using the VOSviewer (version 1.6.11) (Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands, 2019) and Biblioshiny (based on R version 3.6.1, Bibliometrix package version 2.2.1)(University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy, 2016) software tools. VOSviewer is powerful at showing networks of structures composed of many elements based on a distance-based visualization approach. The created networks consist of nodes and lines. Depending on the subject of the analysis, the nodes are represented, e.g., by keywords, sources, countries, or authors. The nodes are grouped into clusters (i.e., each node is assigned to exactly one cluster). The lines represent the relationships between them, e.g., co-occurrence, co-citation. The number of obtained clusters can be determined (limited) by a clustering parameter (e.g., cluster minimum size). However, to achieve the highest homogeneity of individual clusters, this was not the case in the performed analyses. The clustering technique used by the VOSviewer is discussed by Waltman, Van Eck, and Noyons [39]. The technique requires a relevant algorithm for solving an optimization problem. For this purpose, VOSviewer uses the smart local moving algorithm introduced by Waltman and Van Eck [40]. Biblioshiny is a proper tool for presenting general statistics and relations between the most important scientific collaboration units, using the Three Fields Plot [41]. In the first step of this phase, the data obtained from the two databases were converted into an appropriate format, which could be processed using the selected software tool. This made it possible to create a common database. Then, the data was cleaned by removing duplicates and misspelled elements. This enabled the determination of the final number of publications covered by the network analysis (539 items). The network analysis was divided into three parts: (1) Word, keyword, and co-keyword analyses; (2) Scientific collaboration mapping; (3) Top authors, sources, and keywords relations. Word, keyword, and co-keyword analyses are methods of describing and visualizing the structure of scientific fields of a particular group of publications [42]. The level of scientific collaboration is measured, among others, by citation and co-citation analyses [41]. Therefore, scientific collaboration was mapped and analyzed using the results of the co-authorship network of countries and the citation network of authors, countries, and sources. Top authors, sources, and keywords relations were developed using the Three Fields Plot of the Biblioshiny package. The tool makes it possible to visualize the main items of three selected fields (e.g., authors, authors’ keywords, sources) and show how they are related using a Sankey diagram. As for the network analysis, it was assumed that the networks would contain a maximum range of information. Therefore, the boundary conditions were always set to the minimum (1 occurrence/citation). Only in the network of keywords’ co-occurrence, was the threshold set to 3 (occurrences) to make the network legible and draw attention to the most significant elements, relations, and structures thereof.
The final phase of the study included the presentation of conclusions on academic trends and directions for future research in the SSC field.
All the phases of the study presented in this article are shown in Figure 1.

4. Results and Discussion

4.1. Descriptive Bibliometric Analysis of the SC Publications

The analysis resulted in 11,075 and 20,655 publications indexed in the WoS and the Scopus database, respectively, covering the extensive scientific field of the SC (Table 1). The detailed analysis that followed was focused on publications directly related to the SC, i.e., publications where the term ‘smart city’ or ‘smart cities’ appeared as the topic or part of the title. The above-mentioned query wording was revealed as the publication topic in 9694 records listed in the WoS database (including three main document types: 5107 proceedings papers, 4081 articles, and 498 book chapters) and 18,695 records indexed in the Scopus database (including 11,910 proceedings papers, 4697 articles, and 800 book chapters). Considering the analyzed query wording in the publication title, there were 4264 such publications indexed in the WoS database (including 2130 proceedings papers, 1762 articles, and 321 book chapters) and 5976 publications listed in the Scopus database (including 3058 proceedings papers, 2023 articles, and 415 book chapters).
Table 4 presents indicators of publication activity related to the SC concept based on records included in the WoS and Scopus databases. It covers the number of publications (i.e., annual and cumulative) for the period of 1991–2020 and the number of citations that these items have received. The data indicated that from 2010 to 2019, the number of publications on the SC and of relevant citations increased considerably.
The search for the term ‘smart city’ or ‘smart cities’ in the WoS and the Scopus database returned the first reference to it in 1991 [43] and in 1997 [44], respectively.
The most cited article on the SC in the WoS database, with 1425 citations, was ‘Internet of things for smart cities’ written by Zanella et al. [45]. In the second place was ‘Smart cities in Europe’ written by Caragliu et al. [5], cited 722 times. The study by Botta et al. [46] ‘Integration of cloud computing and internet of things: A survey’ appeared in third place with 509 citations. The most cited publication on the SC in the Scopus database, with 2264 citations, was ‘Fog computing and its role in the internet of things’ [47]. Interestingly enough, this paper was not indexed in the WoS database. In the second place in the Scopus database was ‘Internet of things for smart cities’ [45], with 1917 citations. ‘Smart cities in Europe’ [5] took third place with 913 citations. Table A1 and Table A2 in Appendix A show the most cited publications on the SC in the WoS and Scopus databases. It should be noted that most studies on the lists with the highest number of citations were from the period of 2011–2016.
In the next step, the main research areas and categories of studies on the SC were identified, together with sources and authors with the most substantive contributions to the literature. Moreover, the most productive countries and organizations in the field were indicated. The analysis results showed that:
  • Studies on SC covered diverse research areas. According to the WoS database, these areas included, in particular, Computer Science (4615 records with 47.6% of all publications on the SC), Engineering (3970, 41%), and Telecommunications (1969, 20.3%). Considering the WoS categories, the most popular were Engineering Electrical and Electronic (3334 records in the WoS database with 34.4% of all publications on the SC), Computer Science Information Systems (2062, 21.3%), and Telecommunications (1995, 20.6%). Moreover, the SC publications covered the following subject areas in the Scopus database: Computer Science (13,385 records with 71.6% of all publications on the SC indexed in the Scopus database), Engineering (7306, 39.1%), and Social Sciences (4678, 25%).
  • Most publications on the SC indexed in the WoS database appeared in IEEE Access (228 items), Sensors (222), and Lecture Notes in Computer Science (216). The most popular Scopus-indexed sources were Lecture Notes in Computer Science (653), ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (562), and HPCC/SmartCity/DSS 2019 Proceedings (383).
  • The most prolific authors with the most frequent contributions to the SC literature in the WoS database were Neera Kumar (28 publications), Burak Kantarci (25), and Enrique Alba (24). The top of the list of the most productive authors on the SC in the Scopus database was as follows: Paolo Nesi (34), Enrique Alba (32), and Schahram Dustdar (29).
  • The most productive countries in the SC literature field indexed in the WoS database were China (1269 WoS-indexed publications), the United States (1264), and Italy (1175). According to the Scopus database, the order of the most prolific countries was as follows: China (3613 Scopus-indexed records), the United States (2254), and India (1740).
  • The most active organizations with regard to SC publications indexed in the WoS database were the Chinese Academy of Sciences (103 WoS-indexed publications), the University of Bologna (96), and the Polytechnic University of Milan (95). Most SC publications indexed in the Scopus database were affiliated to the Moscow State University of Civil Engineering (194), the Chinese Academy of Sciences (187), and the Polytechnic University of Milan (131).
The most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SC literature field are presented in Table A3 and Table A4 in Appendix A.

4.2. Descriptive Bibliometric Analysis of the SuC Publications

The analysis revealed 9249 and 11,990 records listed in the WoS and the Scopus database, respectively, covering the extensive scientific field of the SuC (Table 2). The detailed analysis that followed concerned publications directly related to the SuC, i.e., publications where the term ‘sustainable city’ or ‘sustainable cities’ appeared as the publication topic or part of the title. The above-mentioned query wording appeared as the topic of 2161 publications (including three main document types: 1254 articles, 611 proceedings papers, and 164 book chapters) and in the title of 817 records (including 353 articles, 212 proceedings papers, and 108 book chapters) indexed in the WoS database. This wording also appeared as the topic of 2678 publications (including 1573 articles, 526 proceedings papers, and 269 book chapters) and in the title of 860 items indexed in the Scopus database (including 435 articles, 177 proceedings papers, and 121 book chapters).
Table 5 presents indicators of publication activity related to the SuC literature based on the items indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases. It contains the number of publications (i.e., annual and cumulative) for the period of 1983–2020 and the number of citations that these items have received.
The first reference to the SuC concept, recognizing the need for sustainable cities, was indexed in the Scopus and the WoS database in 1983 [48] and 1991 [49], respectively.
The most cited article on the SuC, indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases, was ‘The role of urban parks for the sustainable city’ by Chiesura [50] (with 830 citations in the WoS and 945 citations in the Scopus database). The study by Kennedy et al. [51] titled ‘The changing metabolism of cities’ was in second place in the WoS (cited 522 times) and in the third place in the Scopus database (577 citations). The second-place Scopus-indexed item was ‘Urbanization in developing countries: Current trends, future projections, and key challenges for sustainability’ by Cohen [52] (636 citations). Interestingly enough, this paper was not indexed in the WoS database. The article ‘Rethinking sustainable cities: Multilevel governance and the ‘urban’ politics of climate change’ by Bulkeley and Betsill [53] ranked third in the WoS database with 446 citations. Table A5 and Table A6 in Appendix A show the most cited publications on the SuC in the WoS and Scopus databases. It should be added that most studies on the lists with the highest number of citations were from the period of 2004–2007.
The analysis of the main research areas and categories of studies on the SuC, including the most productive sources, authors, countries, and organizations in the field, indicated that:
  • Studies on the SuC covered diverse research areas. In the WoS database, the areas included, in particular, Environmental Sciences and Ecology (819 records with 37.9% of all publications), Urban Studies (561, 26%), and Science Technology other topics (492, 22.8%). The most popular were the following WoS-indexed categories: Urban Studies (561, 26%), Environmental Studies (491, 22.7%), and Environmental Sciences (490, 22.7%). In addition, the SuC publications indexed in the Scopus database primarily concerned the following subject areas: Social Sciences (1307, 48.8%), Environmental Science (1068, 39.9%), and Engineering (751, 28%).
  • The most popular WoS-indexed sources of publications on the SuC were Sustainability (107 records), Sustainable Cities and Society (66), and WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment (63). Most SuC publications indexed in the Scopus database appeared in WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment (111), Sustainability (105), and Sustainable Cities and Society (71).
  • The most productive authors in the literature on the SuC in the WoS database were Kent E. Portney (24 publications), Sheldon Kamieniecki (15), and Michael E. Kraft (15). The top of the list of the most prolific authors on the SuC in the Scopus database was as follows: Simon Elias Bibri (24), Peter Nijkamp (11), Kent E. Portney (10), and Tan Yigitcanlar (10).
  • The most active countries in the SuC literature field, according to the WoS database, were the United States (324 publications), the United Kingdom (216), and China (188). The order of the most productive countries in this field, as indicated by the Scopus database, was as follows: the United States (383), the United Kingdom (297), and Australia (189).
  • The most prolific organizations with regard to the SuC publications indexed in the WoS database were the University of London (39 records), the Royal Institute of Technology (31), and the University of California (28). According to the Scopus database, the most active were the University of Melbourne (33), the Royal Institute of Technology (32), and University College London (32).
The most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SuC literature field are presented in Table A7 and Table A8 in Appendix A.

4.3. Descriptive Bibliometric Analysis of the SSC Publications

The analysis indicated 1117 and 1804 publications listed in the WoS and the Scopus database, respectively, covering the extensive scientific field of the SSC (Table 3). The items (i.e., titles and abstracts) were screened to determine publications directly related to the SSC concept. The process resulted in 355 publications (including 195 articles, 116 proceedings papers, and 29 book chapters) indexed in the WoS database and 489 Scopus-indexed items (including 239 articles, 167 proceedings papers, and 49 book chapters).
Table 6 presents indicators of publication activity related to the SSC literature based on items indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases. It contains the number of publications (i.e., annual and cumulative) for the period of 2005–2020 and the number of citations that these items have received.
The first-ever publication on the SSC, indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases, was a book chapter titled ‘Smart and sustainable city—a case study from Hong Kong’ by Lau et al. [54]. It was published in June 2005, which was correctly recorded in the WoS database. According to the Scopus database, the publication was from 2008.
The most cited article on the SSC recorded in the WoS and the Scopus database (with 163 and 217 citations, respectively) was the paper by Lee et al. [55] titled ‘Towards an effective framework for building smart cities: Lessons from Seoul and San Francisco’. The study ‘Smart and digital city: A systematic literature review’ by Cocchia [14] appeared in second place in the WoS database with 160 citations. Interestingly enough, this publication was not indexed in the Scopus database. The article ‘Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities: Making sense of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanization’ by De Jong et al. [56] ranked third in the WoS database (158 citations) and second in the Scopus database (205 citations). In the third place in the Scopus database was the study ‘Programming environments: Environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart city’ by Gabrys [57] (180 citations). Table A9 and Table A10 in Appendix A show the most cited publications on the SSC in the WoS and Scopus databases. It should be added that most studies on the lists with the highest number of citations were from the period of 2014–2017.
The analysis of the main research areas and categories of studies on the SSC, together with the most productive sources, authors, countries, and organizations in the field indicated that:
  • Studies on the SSC covered diverse research areas. In the WoS database, the areas included, in particular, Science Technology other topics (102 records with 28.3% of all publications), Engineering (101, 28%), and Computer Science (87, 24.1%). The most common were the following WoS-indexed categories: Green Sustainable Science Technology (101, 28%), Urban Studies (66, 18.3%), and Environmental Sciences (61, 16.9%). According to the Scopus database, SSC publications primarily concerned the following subject areas: Social Sciences (197 items with 40.3% of all Scopus-indexed publications), Computer Science (192, 39.3%), and Engineering (192, 39.3%).
  • The most productive sources of publications on the SSC in the WoS database were Sustainability (23 items), Sustainable Cities and Society (23), and the Journal of Cleaner Production (14). Most publications on the SSC indexed in the Scopus database appeared in Sustainable Cities and Society (27), Sustainability (26), the ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (14), and the Journal of Cleaner Production (14).
  • The most prolific authors in the literature on the SSC, according to the WoS database, were Simon Elias Bibri (8 publications), Carl Adams (6), Ali El-Zaart (6), John Krogstie (6), and Tan Yigitcanlar (6). The most productive authors on the SSC recorded in the Scopus database were Simon Elias Bibri (26), John Krogstie (9), and Tan Yigitcanlar (7).
  • The most active countries in the SSC literature field, according to the WoS database, were Italy (39 indexed records), Spain (37), the United Kingdom (36), and China (36). According to the Scopus database, the most productive countries in this field were Italy (52), the United Kingdom (51), and the United States (47).
  • The most prolific organizations in the SSC academic field included in the WoS database were the Royal Institute of Technology (18 items), the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (11), and Queensland University of Technology (7). According to the Scopus database, the most productive entities were the same, but in a different order: the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (28), the Royal Institute of Technology (15), Queensland University of Technology (10).
The most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature field are presented in Table A11 and Table A12 in Appendix A.

4.4. Network Analysis

4.4.1. Word, Keyword, and Co-Keyword Analyses

This subsection presents the results of the most frequently used words and keywords, the author keyword occurrence dynamic, and the co-occurrence network of author keywords in the SSC literature indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases.
The analysis of the most frequent words and keywords was based on the number of relevant wording occurrences in publications in the following types of categories: author keywords, words in titles, and words in abstracts. The analysis results showed that 1666 author keywords were used in the SSC literature. However, as shown in Table 7, there were only two author keywords that occurred more than a hundred times. Although the key topics of the papers under consideration were issues related to the SSC, due to the wide diversification of the concept forms used by authors, total occurrences of author keywords were much fewer than the number of publications. The authors used the terms, such as ‘smart city’, ‘smart cities’, ‘sustainable city’, ‘sustainable cities’. The main term ‘smart and sustainable cities’ appeared in keywords as ‘smart sustainable city/cities’, ‘sustainable smart city/cities’, ‘sustainable and smart city/cities’. It was decided to show them in the original version separately as used by respective authors. The analysis revealed that the most frequent keywords were as follows: ‘smart city’, ‘smart cities’, ‘sustainability’, ‘sustainable city’, ‘sustainable development’, and ‘smart sustainable cities’.
In the next step, the dynamic of the time-dependent occurrence of author keywords was investigated. It could be seen in Figure 2 that the number of all main-term occurrences per year increased over time, but some of them grew more dynamically than others. The terms with the highest increase in occurrences over time were: ‘smart city’, ‘smart cities’, ‘sustainability’, ‘sustainable cities’, and ‘sustainable development’.
To visualize the research hotspots in the SSC scientific field, the co-occurrence of author keywords was analyzed. The keyword co-occurrence threshold was set to three, and 122 keywords out of 1666 were classified as visualization items. The keyword co-occurrence network is presented in Figure 3. The size of the circles corresponded to the number of occurrences of the represented keywords. The larger the circle, the more the author keyword had been co-selected in the SSC literature. The topic similarity and its relative strength were demonstrated by the distance between the elements of individual pairs. Different colors of the circles were assigned to individual keyword clusters. The network in Figure 3 illustrates 16 distinct clusters, representing individual subfields of the research areas in the SSC literature. Table A13 in Appendix A presents the main parameters of the top 10 occurrences of author keywords in the SSC literature. The links between particular keywords indicated the number of papers in which the keywords co-occurred.
Analyzing Figure 3 and Table A13 in Appendix A, it could be concluded that:
  • The core topics in the SSC literature with the highest total link strength were: ‘smart city/cities’, ‘sustainable city/cities’, ‘sustainable development’, ‘ICT’, ‘big data analytics’, and ‘urban sustainability’.
  • Sixteen subfields (clusters of author keywords) were identified in the SSC scientific field, and the five main subfields were as follows:
    red cluster grouping together such keywords as ‘smart city’, ‘sustainability’, ‘smart sustainable city’, ‘innovation’, ‘smart mobility’, ‘renewable energy’, ‘case study’;
    green cluster grouping together such keywords as ’smart sustainable cities’, ‘urban sustainability’, ‘big data analytics’, ‘context-aware computing’, ‘cloud computing’, ‘environmental sustainability’;
    yellow cluster grouping together such keywords as ’internet of things’, ‘iot’, ‘big data’, ‘information and communication technology’, ‘sustainable smart cities’, ‘city planning’;
    purple cluster grouping together such keywords as ’sustainable urban development’, ‘sustainable smart city’, ‘eco-city’, ‘climate changes’, ‘urbanization’, ‘green city’;
    light blue cluster grouping together such keywords as ’technology’, ‘smart’, ‘sustainable’, ‘city’, ‘cities’, ‘governance’.
The obtained results demonstrated a considerable diversity of the co-occurrence of author keywords in individual publications in the SSC literature. This proved the multi-faceted and multi-dimensional character of this particular scientific field.

4.4.2. Mapping Scientific Collaboration

Regional collaboration and research hotspots could be provided with the visualization of co-authorship occurrences of countries. The network illustrating such co-occurrences between countries in the SSC literature is presented in Figure 4. The size of the circles represented the number of occurrences of documents. The collaboration strength was demonstrated by the distance between circles in individual pairs. Different colors of circles were assigned to individual collaboration camps. In addition, Table A14 in Appendix A lists the main parameters of the top 10 occurrence countries. The total link strength of a country indicated the number of papers in which the authors of a given publication represent the two countries involved.
Analyzing the created network, it could be seen that:
  • there were 66 countries represented by authors collaborating in the SSC literature;
  • the United Kingdom and the United States were the countries with the greatest total link strength when it comes to an international collaboration of authors;
  • Italy, Spain, India, and Norway had a high number of publications, but their international collaboration strength was relatively low.
The next step was the country-by-country citation analysis. Figure 5 shows the citation network of countries, illustrating mutual international citations in the SSC literature. The size of the relevant figures depended on the number of publications in a given country. The distance between two circles representing two different countries reflected the number of mutual citations of authors coming from them. The more often authors from one country cited authors from another, the shorter was the distance between two circles representing two different countries in the presented network. The links number (i.e., the number of other countries linked to the analyzed country by citations) and the total link strength (i.e., the number of all citations of authors coming from the country) for the top 10 countries are listed in Table A15 in Appendix A.
Analyzing the created network, it could be seen that:
  • there were 50 countries whose publications in the SSC literature had been cited by foreign authors;
  • Italy, the United States, and the Netherlands were characterized by the closest academic relationship;
  • there were several scientific communities that had published in the SSC literature, and the biggest two were the following groups of countries: (1) Italy, Australia, the United States, and the Netherlands and (2) Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Finland;
  • despite the smaller number of publications, the international significance of countries, such as Sweden, Australia, Brazil, Finland, South Korea, Greece, Taiwan, and Canada, was relatively high (i.e., high total link strength relative to the number of publications).
Collaboration and significance of individual sources in the creation of the SSC knowledge were covered by the source-citation analysis. The source was understood as a journal, a book, or proceedings indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases. Figure 6 shows the network of mutual citations of different sources of the SSC literature. The size of the circles in the figure depended on the number of publications of a given source. The distance between two circles representing two different sources reflected the number of their mutual citations. The more often the publications of a given source cited the other source publications, the shorter was the distance between the two sources in the network presented in the figure. The links number (i.e., the number of other sources related to the analyzed source through citations) and the total link strength (i.e., the number of the source total citations) for the top 10 sources are listed in Table A16.
Analyzing the created network, it could be seen that:
  • there were 99 sources whose publications in the SSC literature had been cited by another source and had created the network;
  • there were two groups of significant sources with strong mutual relations: (1) Sustainability, the Journal of Cleaner Production, the IOP Conference Series and Lecture Notes in Computer Science and (2) Sustainable Cities and Society, the Urban Book Series, and the Journal of Big Data;
  • there were several top sources with a high value of the total link strength, including Sustainable Cities and Society (total link strength: 191), Cities (95), Technological Forecasting and Social Change (70), and Sustainability (66).

4.4.3. Top Authors, Sources, and Keywords Relations

The relations between the main authors’ keywords, authors, and sources were visualized using the Three Fields Plot. In this case, the relevant elements were represented in the diagram by rectangles with a different color. The height of the rectangles depended on the value of the sum of the relations arising between the element that the rectangle represents (one of the elements in the authors’ keyword, author, and source diagram) and the diagram of other elements. The more relations the element had, the higher was the rectangle representing it.
Figure 7 presents the diagram for research in the SSC literature, focusing on relations between the main authors’ keywords, authors, and sources. The analysis demonstrated in which sources the authors of SSC publications had published most frequently and which research topics of the SSC concept they had explored. The research topics were understood here as the authors’ keywords. The analysis of the top authors, sources, and keywords indicated that there were three authors (i.e., Simon Elias Bibri, John Krogstie, and Tan Yigitcanlar) and five sources (i.e., Sustainable Cities and Society, Cities, Sustainability, the Journal of Cleaner Production, and the Urban Book Series) having strong relations with the SSC literature main research topics (‘smart sustainable cities’, ‘smart cities’, and ‘smart city’, in particular).
In addition, Figure 8 shows the relations between the main authors’ keywords, sources, and cited sources. This diagram demonstrated the structure of top sources of publications (as the source and cited source) in developing the knowledge in the main topics in the SSC literature. The topics were represented by the authors’ keywords, and the source or cited source significance was represented by the number of relevant relations. The analysis showed that the key sources of publications based on their contribution to the exploration of the SSC literature’s main topics were Sustainable Cities and Society, the Journal of Cleaner Production, Sustainability, Cities, and the Urban Book Series.

5. Conclusions and Directions for Future Research

Considering that, in the coming years, the number of city inhabitants worldwide would continue to grow, it is extremely important to find solutions that would allow cities to meet the challenges of urbanization. One of them is the SSC concept, but its implementation requires changes at all levels of the city [11]. Therefore, scholars and policymakers responsible for urban development should have extensive theoretical knowledge in this field. They should also familiarize themselves with the achievements and failures of cities that have already implemented the SSC concept to benefit from their positive experience and avoid repeating their mistakes.
For this reason, this article presented the scientific landscape of the SSC based on a bibliometric analysis of 1983–2020 publications recorded in the WoS and Scopus databases. Apart from SSC publications, the analysis also covered publications in the field of the SC and the SuC because the SC and SuC concepts influenced the development of the SSC notion significantly. Because the bibliometric analysis enabled a systematic and transparent review process based on the statistical measurement of science, scholars, or scientific activities, it was possible to identify how the SSC concept and the research trends have changed over the years and what research directions in the SSC field should be considered in the future.
The literature review indicated that the SSC notion is based on a blend of two complex concepts, the SC and the SuC. In general, it could be stated that the SC focuses on the interconnectedness and advancement of the physical, IT, social and business infrastructure to support the city’s collective intelligence, while the SuC integrates environmental, economic, and social considerations to meet the goals of sustainable development. The SSC integrates the two concepts of urban development, but according to different authors, these are approached differently, depending on the starting point for creating the SSC. For some, the SSC is a sustainable city that should become smart because thanks to intelligent solutions, it would be able to meet the challenges of urbanization and achieve the goals of sustainable development [38,58,59]. Others suggest that the starting point for the SSC creation is smart city, which should not focus on technology and smart solutions only but should also take account of the impact of these solutions on the development of the social, economic, and environmental capital [7,12]. As a result, the scope of the research is very wide, and the directions of the SSC concept development are varied and cover diverse scientific areas.
The bibliometric analysis results proved that the number of publications on the SC, SuC, and SSC concepts increased year by year. However, there were substantially fewer publications on the SSC than on the other two concepts. Undoubtedly, this was due to the fact that the SSC concept is the newest, and the authors of the highest number of publications in the field started their publishing activity only in 2014. This might point to a great current interest in this research area on the one hand, and to its enormous potential on the other.
The descriptive bibliometric analysis indicated that studies on the SSC covered diverse research areas, such as Social Sciences, Computer Science, and Engineering, in particular. The most productive sources of publications on the SSC included Sustainable Cities and Society, Sustainability, the ACM International Conference Proceeding Series, and the Journal of Cleaner Production. Indisputably, the most prolific author in this area was Simon Elias Bibri. It must be noted that the publishing activity of the above-mentioned researcher had increased significantly in recent years. However, the SSC scientific landscape was mainly shaped by authors from the countries, such as Italy, the United Kingdom, the United States, Spain, and China. In addition, considering the affiliations of scientists focusing on the SSC concept, a few organizations should be distinguished. This especially concerned the Royal Institute of Technology, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, and the Queensland University of Technology.
The network analysis resulted in more interesting findings. The co-occurrence network of authors’ keywords revealed that research in the SSC area primarily concerned the following topics: ‘smart city/cities’, ‘sustainability’, ‘sustainable city/cities’, ‘sustainable development’, and ‘smart sustainable cities’. However, the clusters obtained from the network analysis of authors’ keywords demonstrated a considerable diversity of the co-occurrence of various topics (i.e., author keywords) in individual publications in the SSC literature. For example, the ‘smart sustainable city’ keyword co-occurred, in particular, with such other keywords as ‘smart city’, ‘sustainability’, ‘innovation’, ‘smart mobility’, and ‘renewable energy’. The ‘smart sustainable cities’ keyword co-occurred with ‘urban sustainability’, ‘big data analytics’, ‘context-aware computing’, ‘cloud computing’, and ‘environmental sustainability’. In contrast, ‘sustainable smart city’ co-occurred with ’sustainable urban development’, ‘eco-city’, ‘climate changes’, ‘urbanization’, and ‘green city’. This proved the multi-faceted and multi-dimensional character of this particular scientific field. Moreover, it seemed to be an interesting topic for further investigation based on a thorough review of the SSC literature.
The results of the countries’ cooperation network analysis proved that there were two countries (i.e., the United Kingdom and the United States), which are definite leaders in the field of co-authorship. However, the citation network of countries showed that other countries (i.e., Norway, Italy, and Sweden) have had the closest relations in this kind of collaboration. The citation network of sources analysis revealed that there were two groups of significant sources cooperating in the SSC literature: (1) Sustainability, the Journal of Cleaner Production, the IOP Conference Series, and Lecture Notes in Computer Science and (2) Sustainable Cities and Society, the Urban Book Series, and the Journal of Big Data.
The bibliometric analysis identified the most frequent topics (i.e., author keywords) and also the most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature. Indicating the sources with the highest productivity and citations, these results could be used by future authors of SSC publications to adopt an appropriate publication strategy. Moreover, the analysis provided valuable information about the most active countries and academic organizations, as well as the most influential authors in the field of the SSC, which could become the basis for establishing future collaboration. The results of the analysis could also be useful for practitioners and decision-makers in cities because they could indicate publications, which are the most influential in terms of the SSC concept development, as evidenced by the number of citations that these publications receive.
In addition, the analysis results proved that, so far, most publications indexed in the WoS and Scopus databases have focused on showing the SSC concept theoretical foundations. There were also publications describing practical aspects of the SSC concept implementation, but they usually related to the implementation of smart solutions in cities (e.g., [58,59,60]). The publications presenting the experience of cities in the implementation of the SSC concept were few (e.g., [61,62,63]), and an increase in its number could only be observed in the last two years. It should be noted, however, that most of them were based on the experiences of cities in developed countries. The number of publications concerning the SSC concept implementation in peripheral countries is very limited (e.g., [36,64]). Therefore, it seems important in the future to give more attention to research showing good experiences in the implementation of smart solutions that make it possible for cities to develop in a manner that could also be called sustainable.
The analysis of the SSC literature indicated some important research gaps and issues with a potential future contribution. In general, there are growing expectations that smart cities will drive sustainable development. For example, Martin et al. [61] identified the key tensions between smart city visions and the goals of sustainable urban development. Höjer and Wangel specified the main challenges for the SSC concept of practical use [9]. In addition, based on an extensive interdisciplinary literature review, Bibri and Krogstie [10] delivered a comprehensive overview of the existing gaps in research on the SSC of the future. It should be noted that there are promising recent research areas concerning a holistic approach to the SSC concept [65,66,67].
Although every effort has been made to perform the bibliometric analysis in the best and most accurate manner, the research has some limitations. The analysis presented in the article was based on WoS- and Scopus-indexed publications only. For this reason, it could not be assumed as fully complete as there might be other important SSC publications not included in the two databases. However, the WoS and Scopus databases alone ensure the highest quality standards. In addition, it must be noted that the number of publications exploring the SSC concept is expected to increase dynamically in the future. Therefore, the obtained results should be treated with caution because they might become obsolete rather fast. Nevertheless, the aim of this study was comprehensive quantitative up-to-date evaluation of the SSC scientific landscape to identify the most prolific authors, sources, institutions, and countries, to indicate the most influential research channels and impact from authors, sources, countries, and research topics, as well as to provide valuable information for further investigation and determine publication strategies.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.J. and A.R.; methodology, A.J., A.R. and M.S.; software, M.S.; data curation, M.S.; writing—original draft preparation, A.J., A.R. and M.S.; writing—review and editing, A.J. and A.R.; visualization, A.R. and M.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The research presented in the article was supported by statutory work 13/990/BK_19/0138 carried out at the Faculty of Organization and Management, Silesian University of Technology.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Most cited publications in the SC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A1. Most cited publications in the SC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Zanella, A., Bui, N., Castellani, A., Vangelista, L., Zorzi, M. (2014)Internet of things for smart citiesIEEE Internet of Things Journal, 1(1), 22–321425
Caragliu A., Del Bo Ch., Nijkamp, P. (2011)Smart cities in EuropeJournal of Urban Technology, 18(2), 65–82722
Botta, A., De Donato, W., Persico, V., Pescapé, A. (2016)Integration of cloud computing and internet of things: A surveyFuture Generation Computer Systems 56, 684–700509
Neirotti, P., De Marco, A., Cagliano, A.C., Mangano, G., Scorrano, F. (2014)Current trends in smart city initiatives: Some stylised factsCities, 38, 25–36485
Batty, M., Axhausen, K.W., Giannotti, F. et al. (2012)Smart cities of the futureEuropean Physical Journal: Special Topics, 214(1), 481–518450
Jin, J., Gubbi, J., Marusic, S. et al. (2014)An information framework for creating a smart city through internet of thingsIEEE Internet of Things Journal, 1, 2, 112–121416
Albino, V., Berardi, U., Dangelico, R.M. (2015)Smart cities: Definitions, dimensions, performance, and initiativesJournal of Urban Technology, 22, 1, 3–21391
Shapiro, J.M. (2006)Smart cities: Quality of life, productivity, and the growth effects of human capitalReview of Economics and Statistics, 88, 2, 324–335376
Schaffers, H., Komninos, N., Pallot, M. et al. (2011)Smart cities and the future internet: Towards cooperation frameworks for open innovationLecture Notes in Computer Science, 6656, 431–446351
Mancarella, P. (2014)MES (multi-energy systems): An overview of concepts and evaluation modelsEnergy, 65, 1–17342
Table A2. Most cited publications in the SC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A2. Most cited publications in the SC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Bonomi, F., Milito, R., Zhu, J., Addepalli, S. (2012)Fog computing and its role in the internet of thingsMCC’12—Proceedings of the 1st ACM Mobile Cloud Computing Workshop, 13–152264
Zanella, A., Bui, N., Castellani, A., Vangelista, L., Zorzi, M. (2014)Internet of things for smart citiesIEEE Internet of Things Journal, 1(1), 22–321917
Caragliu A., Del Bo Ch., Nijkamp, P. (2011)Smart cities in EuropeJournal of Urban Technology, 18(2), 65–82913
Hollands, R.G. (2008)Will the real smart city please stand up? Intelligent, progressive or entrepreneurial? City, 12(3), 303–320892
Chourabi, H., Nam, T., Walker, S., et al. (2012)Understanding smart cities: An integrative frameworkProceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2289–2297808
Kitchin, R. (2014)The real-time city? Big data and smart urbanism GeoJournal, 79(1), 1–14699
Botta, A., De Donato, W., Persico, V., Pescapé, A. (2016)Integration of Cloud computing and Internet of Things: A surveyFuture Generation Computer Systems 56, 684–700689
Neirotti, P., De Marco, A., Cagliano, A.C., Mangano, G., Scorrano, F. (2014)Current trends in smart city initiatives: Some stylised factsCities, 38, 25–36643
Nam, T., Pardo, T.A. (2011)Conceptualizing smart city with dimensions of technology, people, and institutions ACM International Conference Proceeding Series, 282–291595
Batty, M., Axhausen, K.W., Giannotti, F. et al. (2012)Smart cities of the futureEuropean Physical Journal: Special Topics, 214(1), 481–518594
Table A3. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A3. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Neera Kumar28IEEE Access228China1269Chinese Academy of Sciences103
Burak Kantarci25Sensors222United States1264University of Bologna96
Enrique Alba24Lecture Notes in Computer Science216Italy1175Polytechnic University of Milan95
Luis Munoz23Sustainability115Spain822Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche88
Paolo Nesi23IEEE Internet of Things Journal91India795University of London87
Schahram Dustdar22Future Generation Computer Systems the International Journal of eScience88United Kingdom647Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique86
Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo21IEEE Communications Magazine80Germany445Indian Institute of Technology83
Renata Paola Dameri21Sustainable Cities and Society76France366Polytechnic University of Turin82
Luca Foschini21IEEE Second International Smart Cities Conference ISC2 201670Australia364Polytechnic University of Bucharest81
Jaime Lloret21Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing67Canada322University of Naples Federico II81
Table A4. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A4. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Paolo Nesi34Lecture Notes in Computer Science653China3613Moscow State University of Civil Engineering194
Enrique Alba32ACM International Conference Proceeding Series562United States2254Chinese Academy of Sciences187
Schahram Dustdar29HPCC/SmartCity/DSS 2019383India1740Polytechnic University of Milan131
Luca Foschini27MATEC Web of Conferences346Italy1560University of Bologna121
Jaime Lloret26SmartWorld/UIC/ATC/ScalCom/CBDCom/IoP/SCI 2018321United Kingdom1163Czech Technical University in Prague114
Antonio Puliafito26Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing305Spain1051Tsinghua University111
Arkady Zaslavsky26SmartWorld/SCALCOM/UIC/ATC/CBDCom/IOP/SCI 2017283Germany740Ministry of Education China108
Pierfrancesco Bellini25HPCC/SmartCity/DSS 2018249France605Polytechnic University of Turin108
Burak Kantarci25Communications in Computer and Information Science223Russia605Wuhan University107
Neera Kumar25Sensors219Australia531Beihang University104
Table A5. Most cited publications in the SuC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A5. Most cited publications in the SuC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Chiesura, A. (2004)The role of urban parks for the sustainable cityLandscape and Urban Planning, 68(1), 129–138830
Kennedy, C., Cuddihy, J., Engel-Yan, J. (2007)The changing metabolism of citiesJournal of Industrial Ecology, 11(2), 43–59522
Bulkeley, H., Betsill, M.M. (2005)Rethinking sustainable cities: Multilevel governance and the ‘urban’ politics of climate changeEnvironmental Politics, 14(1), 42–63446
Neuman, M. (2005)The compact city fallacyJournal of Planning Education and Research, 25(1), 11–26307
Portney, K.E. (2003)Taking sustainable cities seriously-Economic development, the environment, and quality of life in American citiesAmerican and Comparative Environmental Policy, 1–284263
Haase, D., Frantzeskaki, N., Elmqvist, T. (2014)Ecosystem services in urban landscapes: Practical applications and governance implicationsAMBIO, 43, 4, 407–412250
Nevens, F., Frantzeskaki, N., Gorissen, L., Loorbach, D. (2013)Urban transition labs: Co-creating transformative action for sustainable citiesJournal of Cleaner Production, 50, 111–122217
Chang, C.-R., Li, M.-H., Chang, S.-D. (2007)A preliminary study on the local cool-island intensity of Taipei city parksLandscape and Urban Planning, 80(4), 386–395209
Bulkeley, H., Betsill, M.M. (2013)Revisiting the urban politics of climate changeEnvironmental Politics, 22(1), 136–154200
Kaushal, S.S., Belt, K.T. (2012)The urban watershed continuum: evolving spatial and temporal dimensionsUrban Ecosystems, 15, 2, 409–435178
Table A6. Most cited publications in the SuC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A6. Most cited publications in the SuC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Chiesura, A. (2004)The role of urban parks for the sustainable cityLandscape and Urban Planning, 68(1), 129–138945
Cohen, B. (2006)Urbanization in developing countries: Current trends, future projections, and key challenges for sustainabilityTechnology in Society, 28(1-2), 63–80636
Kennedy, C., Cuddihy, J., Engel-Yan, J. (2007)The changing metabolism of citiesJournal of Industrial Ecology, 11(2), 43–59577
Bulkeley, H., Betsill, M.M. (2005)Rethinking sustainable cities: Multilevel governance and the ‘urban’ politics of climate changeEnvironmental Politics, 14(1), 42–63519
Neuman, M. (2005)The compact city fallacyJournal of Planning Education and Research, 25(1), 11–26377
Chang, C.-R., Li, M.-H., Chang, S.-D. (2007)A preliminary study on the local cool-island intensity of Taipei city parksLandscape and Urban Planning, 80(4), 386–395236
Bulkeley, H., Betsill, M.M. (2013)Revisiting the urban politics of climate changeEnvironmental Politics, 22(1), 136–154231
Nevens, F., Frantzeskaki, N., Gorissen, L., Loorbach, D. (2013)Urban transition labs: Co-creating transformative action for sustainable citiesJournal of Cleaner Production, 50, 111–122217
Kenworthy, J.R. (2006)The eco-city: Ten key transport and planning dimensions for sustainable city developmentEnvironment and Urbanization, 18(1), 67–85205
De Jong, M., Joss, S., Schraven, D., Zhan, C., Weijnen, M. (2015)Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities; Making sense of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanizationJournal of Cleaner Production, 109, 25–38204
Table A7. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SuC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A7. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SuC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Kent E. Portney24Sustainability107United States324University of London39
Sheldon Kamieniecki15Sustainable Cities and Society66United Kingdom216Royal Institute of Technology31
Michael E. Kraft15WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment63China188University of California28
Tan Yigitcanlar10Cities45Australia136Chinese Academy of Sciences27
Peter Nijkamp9Journal of Cleaner Production44Italy124Arizona State University24
Simon Elias Bibri8Advances in Architecture Series30Spain100University College London23
Mattias Höjer8Landscape and Urban Planning23Germany93Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique21
Carl Adams6Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences23Brazil91University of Wisconsin20
Ali El-Zaart6Procedia Engineering21Netherlands83Norwegian University of Science Technology17
John Krogstie6Habitat International19Canada72University of Naples Federico II17
Table A8. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SuC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A8. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SuC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Simon Elias Bibri24WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment111United States383University of Melbourne33
Peter Nijkamp11Sustainability105United Kingdom297The Royal Institute of Technology32
Kent E. Portney10Sustainable Cities and Society71Australia189University College London32
Tan Yigitcanlar10Cities42China175Norwegian University of Science and Technology31
John Krogstie9Journal of Cleaner Production42Italy158Chinese Academy of Sciences31
Simon Marvin9Advances in Architecture Series30Spain122Arizona State University25
Stephanie Pincetl8IOP Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science27Germany121National University of Singapore20
Virgilio Gilart-Iglesias7World Sustainability Series24France111Delft University of Technology19
Toshiharu Ikaga7Landscape and Urban Planning23Canada100University of Naples Federico II19
Steffen Lehmann7Local Environment23Netherlands99University of Manchester17
Table A9. Most cited publications in the SSC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A9. Most cited publications in the SSC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Lee, J.H., Hancock, M.G., Hu, M.-C. (2014)Towards an effective framework for building smart cities: Lessons from Seoul and San FranciscoTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 89, 80–99162
Cocchia, A. (2014)Smart and digital city: A systematic literature reviewSmart City: How to Create Public and Economic Value With High Technology in Urban Space, 13–43160
De Jong, M., Joss, S., Schraven, D., Zhan, C., Weijnen, M. (2015)Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities: Making sense of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanizationJournal of Cleaner Production, 109, 25–38158
Gabrys, J. (2014)Programming environments: Environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart cityEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 32(1), 30–48148
Ahvenniemi, H., Huovila, A., Pinto-Seppä, I., Airaksinen, M. (2017)What are the differences between sustainable and smart cities?Cities, 60, 234–245138
Bibri, S.E., Krogstie, J. (2017)Smart sustainable cities of the future: An extensive interdisciplinary literature reviewSustainable Cities and Society, 31, 183–212109
McLaren, D., Agyeman, J. (2015)Sharing cities: A case for truly smart and sustainable citiesBook Series: Urban and Industrial Environments, 1–445100
Kramers, A., Höjer, M., Lövehagen, N., Wangel, J. (2014)Smart sustainable cities—Exploring ICT solutions for reduced energy use in cities Environmental Modelling and Software, 56, 52–6286
Marsal-Llacuna, M.-L., Colomer-Llinàs, J., Meléndez-Frigola, J. (2015)Lessons in urban monitoring taken from sustainable and livable cities to better address the Smart Cities initiativeTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 90, 611–62282
Yigitcanlar T., Lee S. (2014)Korean ubiquitous-eco-city: A smart-sustainable urban form or a branding hoax?Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 89(1), 100–11481
Table A10. Most cited publications in the SSC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A10. Most cited publications in the SSC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorsTitleSource TitleTimes Cited
Lee, J.H., Hancock, M.G., Hu, M.-C. (2014)Towards an effective framework for building smart cities: Lessons from Seoul and San FranciscoTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 89, 80–99217
De Jong, M., Joss, S., Schraven, D., Zhan, C., Weijnen, M. (2015)Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities: Making sense of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanizationJournal of Cleaner Production, 109, 25–38205
Gabrys, J. (2014)Programming environments: Environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart cityEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 32(1), 30–48180
Ahvenniemi, H., Huovila, A., Pinto-Seppä, I., Airaksinen, M. (2017)What are the differences between sustainable and smart cities?Cities, 60, 234–245179
Zygiaris, S. (2013)Smart city reference model: Assisting planners to conceptualize the building of smart city innovation ecosystemsJournal of the Knowledge Economy, 4(2), 217–231172
Bibri, S.E., Krogstie, J. (2017)Smart sustainable cities of the future: An extensive interdisciplinary literature reviewSustainable Cities and Society, 31, 183–212160
McLaren, D., Agyeman, J. (2015)Sharing cities: A case for truly smart and sustainable citiesBook Series: Urban and Industrial Environments, 1–445123
Kramers, A., Höjer, M., Lövehagen, N., Wangel, J. (2014)Smart sustainable cities - Exploring ICT solutions for reduced energy use in citiesEnvironmental Modelling and Software, 56, 52–62117
Marsal-Llacuna, M.-L., Colomer-Llinàs, J., Meléndez-Frigola, J. (2015)Lessons in urban monitoring taken from sustainable and livable cities to better address the Smart Cities initiativeTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 90, 611–622110
Vilajosana, I., Llosa, J., Martinez, B. et al. (2013)Bootstrapping smart cities through a self-sustainable model based on big data flowsIEEE Communications Magazine, 51(6),6525605, 128–134110
Table A11. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature indexed in the WoS database.
Table A11. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature indexed in the WoS database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Simon Elias Bibri8Sustainability23Italy39Royal Institute of Technology18
Carl Adams6Sustainable Cities and Society23Spain37Norwegian University of Science and Technology11
Ali El-Zaart6Journal of Cleaner Production14United Kingdom36Queensland University of Technology7
John Krogstie6Cities13China36Beirut Arab University6
Tan Yigitcanlar6Innovation Technology and Knowledge Management7United States34Indian Institute of Technology6
Mattias Höjer5Sustainable Smart Cities Creating Spaces for Technological Social and Business Development6Sweden25University of Girona6
Maria Lluïsa Marsal-Llacuna5Technological Forecasting and Social Change6India20University of Portsmouth6
James Evans4Energy Procedia5Brazil19Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche5
Maysoun Ibrahim4IOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering5Australia17University of London5
Md Kamruzzaman 4Urban Book Series5Norway16University of Naples Federico II5
Table A12. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
Table A12. Most productive authors, sources, countries, and organizations in the SSC literature indexed in the Scopus database.
AuthorNumber of PublicationsSourceNumber of PublicationsCountryNumber of PublicationsOrganizationNumber of Publications
Simon Elias Bibri26Sustainable Cities and Society27Italy52Norwegian University of Science and Technology28
John Krogstie9Sustainability26United Kingdom51Royal Institute of Technology15
Tan Yigitcanlar7ACM International Conference Proceeding Series14United States47Queensland University of Technology10
Carl Adams6Journal of Cleaner Production14Spain46Delft University of Technology9
Ali El-Zaart6Lecture Notes in Computer Science13China39University of Alicante9
Virgilio Gilart-Iglesias6Urban Book Series13India34University of Manchester6
Maria Lluïsa Marsal-Llacuna6Cities12Norway34University of Girona6
Sara Heitlinger5ITU News9Sweden26Polytechnic University of Turin6
María Dolores Andújar-Montoya4IOP Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science8Australia25University College London6
James Evans4IOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering7Germany19Polytechnic University of Milan6
Table A13. Main parameters of the top 10 authors’ keywords (ranked by the total link strength) in the co-occurrence network of author keywords in the SSC literature.
Table A13. Main parameters of the top 10 authors’ keywords (ranked by the total link strength) in the co-occurrence network of author keywords in the SSC literature.
KeywordNumber of LinksTotal Link StrengthOccurrences
smart city84266168
smart cities71208112
sustainability6517372
sustainable development4612140
smart sustainable cities3611737
sustainable city4010342
sustainable cities399337
ICT338826
big data analytics227417
urban sustainability286825
Table A14. Main parameters of the top 10 countries (ranked by the total link strength) in the co-authorship network of countries in the SSC literature.
Table A14. Main parameters of the top 10 countries (ranked by the total link strength) in the co-authorship network of countries in the SSC literature.
CountryNumber of LinksTotal Link StrengthDocuments
United Kingdom224451
United States204347
China182939
Sweden122626
Italy142452
Australia112425
Netherlands162218
Spain121746
Pakistan14146
Brazil91319
Table A15. Main parameters of the top 10 countries (ranked by the total link strength) in the citation network of countries in the SSC literature.
Table A15. Main parameters of the top 10 countries (ranked by the total link strength) in the citation network of countries in the SSC literature.
CountryNumber of LinksTotal Link StrengthDocuments
Norway2621234
Italy3419252
Sweden3217226
United Kingdom3314351
Australia2914025
Brazil3012619
Finland30998
Spain229446
United States219347
South Korea238115
Table A16. Main parameters of the top 10 sources in the citation network of sources (ranked by the total link strength) in the SSC literature.
Table A16. Main parameters of the top 10 sources in the citation network of sources (ranked by the total link strength) in the SSC literature.
CountryNumber of LinksTotal Link StrengthDocuments
Sustainable Cities and Society4919127
Cities399513
Technological Forecasting and Social Change29706
Sustainability226626
Urban Book Series86013
Environmental Modelling and Software32491
Journal of Cleaner Production143414
Journal of Big Data10263
International Journal of Public Sector Management13231
Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity12232

References

  1. United Nations. World Urbanization Prospects: The 2018 Revision; (ST/ESA/SER.A/420); Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, United Nations: New York, UY, USA, 2019; pp. 9–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  2. Girardet, H. Creating Sustainable Cities, 1st ed.; Series: Schumacher Briefings; Green Book: Totnes, UK, 1999. [Google Scholar]
  3. United Nations. New Urban Agenda HABITAT III; The United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III): Quito, Ecuador, 2017; p. 3. [Google Scholar]
  4. United Nations. Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development; Resolution Adopted by the General Assembly on 25 September 2015 (A/RES/70/1); United Nations: New York, UY, USA, 2015; pp. 15–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Caragliu, A.; del Bo, C.; Nijkamp, P. Smart cities in Europe. J. Urban Technol. 2011, 18, 65–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Silva, B.N.; Khan, M.; Han, K. Towards sustainable smart cities: A review of trends, architectures, components and open challenges in smart cities. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2018, 38, 697–713. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Ahvenniemi, H.; Huovila, A.; Pinto-Seppä, I.; Airaksinen, M. What are the differences between sustainable and smart cities? Cities 2017, 60, 234–245. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Yigitcanlar, T.; Lee, S. Korean ubiquitous-eco-city: A smart-sustainable urban form or a branding hoax? Technol. Forecast. Soc. 2014, 89, 100–114. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. Höjer, M.; Wangel, J. Smart Sustainable Cities: Definition and Challenges. In ICT Innovations for Sustainability. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing; Hilty, L.M., Aebischer, B., Eds.; Springer International Publishing: Cham, Switzerland, 2015; Volume 310, pp. 333–349. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Bibri, S.E.; Krogstie, J. Smart sustainable cities of the future: An extensive interdisciplinary literature review. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2017, 31, 183–212. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Ibrahim, M.; El-Zaart, A.; Adams, C. Smart sustainable cities roadmap: Readiness for transformation towards urban sustainability. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2018, 37, 530–540. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  12. Bouzguenda, I.; Alalouch, C.; Fava, N. Towards smart sustainable cities: A review of the role digital citizen participation could play in advancing social sustainability. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2019, 50, 101627. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Yigitcanlar, T.; Kamruzzaman, M.; Foth, M.; Sabatini-Marques, J.; da Costa, E.; Ioppolo, G. Can cities become smart without being sustainable? A systematic review of the literature. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2019, 45, 348–365. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Cocchia, A. Smart and Digital City: A Systematic Literature Review. In Smart City: How to Create Public and Economic Value with High Technology in Urban Space; Dameri, R.P., Rosenthal-Sabroux, C., Eds.; Springer International Publishing: Cham, Switzerland, 2014; pp. 13–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Guo, Y.M.; Huang, Z.L.; Guo, J.; Li, H.; Guo, X.R.; Nkeli, M.J. Bibliometric analysis on smart cities research. Sustainability 2019, 11, 3606. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  16. Gupta, P.; Chauhan, S.; Jaiswal, M.P. Classification of smart city research—A descriptive literature. Review and future research agenda. Inform. Syst. Front. 2019, 21, 661–685. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Fu, Y.; Zhang, X. Trajectory of urban sustainability concepts: A 35-year bibliometric analysis. Cities 2017, 60, 113–123. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Wang, M.-H.; Ho, Y.-S.; Fu, H.-Z. Global performance and development on sustainable city based on natural science and social science research: A bibliometric analysis. Sci. Total Environ. 2019, 666, 1245–1254. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  19. Trindade, E.P.; Hinnig, M.P.F.; Moreira da Costa, E.; Marques, J.S.; Bastos, R.C.; Yigitcanlar, T. Sustainable development of smart cities: A systematic review of the literature. J. Open Innov. Technol. Mark. Complex. 2017, 3, 1–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  20. Durieux, V.; Gevenois, P.A. Bibliometric indicators: Quality measurements of scientific publication. Radiology 2010, 255, 342–351. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  21. Harrison, C.; Eckman, B.; Hamilton, R.; Hartswick, P.; Kalagnanam, J.; Paraszczak, J.; Williams, P. Foundations for smarter cities. IBM J. Res. Dev. 2010, 54, 1–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Hall, R.E.; Bowerman, B.; Braverman, J.; Taylor, J.; Todosow, H.; Von Wimmersperg, U. The vision of a smart city. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Life Extension Technology Workshop, Paris, France, 28 September 2000. [Google Scholar]
  23. Giffinger, R.; Fertner, C.; Kramar, H.; Kalasek, R.; Pichler-Milanovic, N.; Meijers, E. Smart Cities: Ranking of European Medium-Sized Cities; Centre of Regional Science, Vienna University of Technology: Vienna, Austria, 2007. [Google Scholar]
  24. Kourtit, K.; Nijkamp, P. Smart cities in the innovation age. Innov. Abingdon 2012, 25, 93–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Yigitcanlar, T.; Kamruzzaman, M.; Buys, L.; Ioppolo, G.; Sabatini-Marques, J.; Moreira da Costa, E.; Yun, J.J. Understanding ‘smart cities’: Intertwining development drivers with desired outcomes in a multidimensional framework. Cities 2018, 81, 145–160. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Angelidou, M. Smart city policies: A spatial approach. Cities 2014, 41 (Suppl. 1), S3–S11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Gutiérrez, V.; Theodoridis, E.; Mylonas, G.; Shi, F.; Adeel, U.; Diez, L.; Amaxilatis, D.; Choque, J.; Camprodom, G.; McCann, J.; et al. Co-creating the cities of the future. Sensors 2016, 16, 1971. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  28. Janik, A.; Ryszko, A. Scientific Landscape of Smart City Concept: A Bibliometric Analysis. In Proceedings of the 32nd International Business Information Management Association Conference (IBIMA), Seville, Spain, 15–16 November 2018; pp. 6254–6266. [Google Scholar]
  29. Albino, V.; Berardi, U.; Dangelico, R.M. Smart cities: Definitions, dimensions, performance, and initiatives. J. Urban Technol. 2015, 22, 3–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Meijer, A.; Bolivar, M.P.R. Governing the smart city: A review of the literature on smart urban governance. Int. Rev. Adm. Sci. 2016, 82, 392–408. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Ewers, H.; Nijkamp, P. Urban Sustainability; Nijkamp, P., Ed.; Gower House: Avebury, UK, 1990. [Google Scholar]
  32. United Nations. World Economic and Social Survey 2013. Sustainable Development Challenges; E/2013/50/Rev.1; Department of Economic and Social Affairs: New York, NY, USA, 2013. [Google Scholar]
  33. Hiremath, R.B.; Balachandra, P.; Kumar, B.; Bansode, S.S.; Murali, J. Indicator-based urban sustainability—A review. Energy Sustain. Dev. 2013, 17, 555–563. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Ibrahim, M.; Adams, C.; El-Zaart, A. Paving the way to smart sustainable cities: Transformation models and challenges. J. Inf. Syst. Technol. Manag. 2015, 12, 559–576. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  35. Bibri, S.E.; Krogstie, J. On the social shaping dimensions of smart sustainable cities: A study in science, technology, and society. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2017, 29, 219–246. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  36. Dhingra, M.; Chattopadhyay, S. Advancing smartness of traditional settlements-case analysis of Indian and Arab old cities. Int. J. Sustain. Built Environ. 2016, 5, 549–563. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  37. Bibri, S.E. A foundational framework for smart sustainable city development: Theoretical, disciplinary, and discursive dimensions and their synergies. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2018, 38, 758–794. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Kramers, A.; Höjer, M.; Lövehagen, N.; Wangel, J. Smart sustainable cities: Exploring ICT solutions for reduced energy use in cities. Environ. Model. Softw. 2014, 56, 52–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Waltman, L.; Eck, N.J.; Noyons, C.M. A unified approach to mapping and clustering of bibliometric networks. J. Informetr. 2010, 4, 629–635. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  40. Waltman, L.; Eck, N.J. A smart local moving algorithm for large-scale modularity-based community detection. Eur. Phys. J. B 2013, 86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Eck, N.J.; Waltman, L. Visualizing bibliometric networks. In Measuring Scholarly Impact; Ding, Y., Rousseau, R., Wolfram, D., Eds.; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2014; pp. 285–320. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Zhang, J.; Yu, Q.; Zheng, F.S.; Long, C.; Lu, Z.X.; Duan, Z.G. Comparing keyword plus of WoS and author keywords: A case study of patient adherence research. J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol. 2016, 67, 967–972. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Drohojowska, H. San Francisco style, Art-Deco elements inform a smart city residence + interior-design by arnold, Val. Archit. Digest 1991, 48, 114–121. [Google Scholar]
  44. Shetty, V. A tale of smart cities. Commun. Int. 1997, 24, 16. [Google Scholar]
  45. Zanella, A.; Bui, N.; Castellani, A.; Vangelista, L.; Zorzi, M. Internet of things for smart cities. IEEE Internet Things 2014, 1, 22–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  46. Botta, A.; De Donato, W.; Persico, V.; Pescapé, A. Integration of cloud computing and internet of things: A survey. Future Gener. Comp. Syst. 2016, 56, 684–700. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Bonomi, F.; Milito, R.; Zhu, J.; Addepalli, S. Fog Computing and Its Role in the Internet of Things MCC’12. In Proceedings of the 1st ACM Mobile Cloud Computing Workshop, San Francisco, CA, USA, 22–26 June 2012; pp. 13–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Cadman, D. Resourceful cities: Towards an ecology of finance. Town Country Plan. 1983, 52, 218–220. [Google Scholar]
  49. Kennedy, D. Permaculture and the sustainable city. Ekistics 1991, 58, 210–215. [Google Scholar]
  50. Chiesura, A. The role of urban parks for the sustainable city. Landsc. Urban Plan. 2004, 68, 129–138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  51. Kennedy, C.; Cuddihy, J.; Engel-Yan, J. The changing metabolism of cities. J. Ind. Ecol. 2007, 11, 43–59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. Cohen, B. Urbanization in developing countries: Current trends, future projections, and key challenges for sustainability. Technol. Soc. 2006, 28, 63–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Bulkeley, H.; Betsill, M.M. Rethinking sustainable cities: Multilevel governance and the ‘urban’ politics of climate change. Environ. Polit. 2005, 14, 42–63. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  54. Lau, S.S.Y.; Wang, J.; Giridharan, R. Smart and sustainable city—A case study from Hong Kong. Smart Sustain. Built Environ. 2005, 33–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Lee, J.H.; Hancock, M.G.; Hu, M.-C. Towards an effective framework for building smart cities: Lessons from Seoul and San Francisco. Technol. Forecast. Soc. 2014, 89, 80–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. De Jong, M.; Joss, S.; Schraven, D.; Zhan, C.; Weijnen, M. Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities: Making sense of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanization. J. Clean. Prod. 2015, 109, 25–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  57. Gabrys, J. Programming environments: Environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart city. Environ. Plan. D Soc. Space 2014, 32, 30–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  58. Bibri, S.E. The IoT for smart sustainable cities of the future: An analytical framework for sensor-based big data applications for environmental sustainability. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2018, 38, 230–253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Jamei, E.; Mortimer, M.; Seyedmahmoudian, M.; Horan, B.; Stojcevski, A. Investigating the role of virtual reality in planning for sustainable smart cities. Sustainability 2017, 9, 2006. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  60. Lim, H.S.M.; Taeihagh, A. Autonomous vehicles for smart and sustainable cities: An in-depth exploration of privacy and cybersecurity implications. Energies 2018, 11, 1062. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  61. Martin, C.J.; Evans, J.; Karvonen, A. Smart and sustainable? Five tensions in the visions and practices of the smart-sustainable city in Europe and North America. Technol. Forecast. Soc. 2018, 133, 269–278. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  62. Mahesa, R.; Yudoko, G.; Anggoro, Y. Dataset on the sustainable smart city development in Indonesia. Data Brief 2019, 25, 104098. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  63. Daptarda, V.; Gore, M. Smart cities for sustainable development in India: Opportunities and challenges. Eur. J. Sustain. Dev. 2019, 8, 133–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. El-Kholei, A.O.; Yassine, G. The mirage of smart sustainable cities in the Arab region. Open House Int. 2019, 44, 8–16. [Google Scholar]
  65. Jonek-Kowalska, I.; Kaźmierczak, J.; Kramarz, M.; Hilarowicz, A.; Wolny, M. Introduction to the Research Project “Smart City: A Holistic Approach”. In Proceedings of the 5th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM 2018, SGEM2018 Conference Proceedings, Albena, Bulgaria, 24 August–2 September 2018; Volume 5, pp. 101–112. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  66. Karwot, J.; Kaźmierczak, J.; Wyczółkowski, R.; Paszkowski, W.; Przystałka, P. “Smart Water in Smart City”: A case study. In Proceedings of the 16th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM 2016, SGEM 2016 Conference Proceedings, Albena, Bulgaria, 30 June–6 July 2016; Volume 3, pp. 851–858. [Google Scholar]
  67. Loska, A.; Paszkowski, W. SmartMaintenance—The Concept of Supporting the Exploitation Decision-Making Process in the Selected Technical Network System. In Intelligent Systems in Production Engineering and Maintenance (ISPEM 2017); Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing; Springer International Publishing: Cham, Switzerland, 2018; Volume 637, pp. 64–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Research methodology.
Figure 1. Research methodology.
Sustainability 12 00779 g001
Figure 2. Dynamic of author keywords in the smart sustainable city (SSC) literature.
Figure 2. Dynamic of author keywords in the smart sustainable city (SSC) literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g002
Figure 3. Co-occurrence network of author keywords (min. number of occurrences: three) in the SSC literature.
Figure 3. Co-occurrence network of author keywords (min. number of occurrences: three) in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g003
Figure 4. Co-authorship network of countries (min. number of publications: one) in the SSC literature.
Figure 4. Co-authorship network of countries (min. number of publications: one) in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g004
Figure 5. Citation network of countries (min. number of publications: one) in the SSC literature.
Figure 5. Citation network of countries (min. number of publications: one) in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g005
Figure 6. Citation network of sources (min. number of documents: one) in the SSC literature.
Figure 6. Citation network of sources (min. number of documents: one) in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g006
Figure 7. Relations between author keywords (left), authors (middle), and sources (right) for research in the SSC literature.
Figure 7. Relations between author keywords (left), authors (middle), and sources (right) for research in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g007
Figure 8. Relations between author keywords (left), sources (middle), and cited sources (right) for research in the SSC literature.
Figure 8. Relations between author keywords (left), sources (middle), and cited sources (right) for research in the SSC literature.
Sustainability 12 00779 g008
Table 1. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the smart city (SC)—searching by different query wording.
Table 1. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the smart city (SC)—searching by different query wording.
No.Query Wording (QW)Web of ScienceScopus
QW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of PublicationQW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of Publication
#1“smart city” OR “smart cities”42649694597618,695
#2“intelligent city” OR “intelligent cities”7022774295
#3“digital city” OR “digital cities”193536268817
#4“virtual city” OR “virtual cities”117387172601
#5“cyber city” OR “cyber cities”14382174
#6“networked city” OR “networked cities”44632858
#7“knowledge city” OR “knowledge cities”104194109234
#8“wisdom city” OR “wisdom cities”10281234
#9“ubiquitous city” OR “ubiquitous cities”218132119
#10“real-time city” OR “real-time cities”17401531
#11“hybrid city” OR “hybrid cities”387555137
Extensive scientific field of SC (#1 OR #2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 OR #10 OR #11)488211,075675220,655
Publications indirectly related to SC (#2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 OR #10 OR #11)62816037862309
Publications directly related to SC covered by detailed bibliometric analysis (#1)42649694597618,695
Table 2. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the sustainable city (SuC)—searching by different query wording.
Table 2. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the sustainable city (SuC)—searching by different query wording.
No.Query Wording (QW)Web of ScienceScopus
QW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of PublicationQW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of Publication
#1“sustainable city” OR “sustainable cities”81721618602678
#2“sustainable urban”1448442517325980
#3“resilient city” OR “resilient cities”169404166461
#4“eco-city” OR “eco-cities”241561292647
#5“ecocity” OR “ecocities”307135100
#6“city sustainability”3010850211
#7“green city” OR “green cities”193427223630
#8“urban sustainability”57619106772326
#9“sustainable urbanization”89275101362
#10“sustainable city development”218226109
#11“sustainable urban development”37715524672272
Extensive scientific field of SuC (#1 OR #2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 OR #10 OR #11)35549249409411,990
Publications indirectly related to SuC (#2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 OR #10 OR #11)27707638327410,034
Publications directly related to SuC covered by detailed bibliometric analysis (#1)81721618602678
Table 3. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the smart sustainable city (SSC)—searching by different query wording.
Table 3. Results of initial bibliometric analysis of the extensive scientific field of the smart sustainable city (SSC)—searching by different query wording.
No.Query Wording (QW)Web of ScienceScopus
QW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of PublicationQW Appearance in Title of PublicationQW Appearance as Topic of Publication
#1“smart sustainable city” OR “smart sustainable cities”386457108
#2“sustainable smart city” OR “sustainable smart cities”33634183
#3“smart and sustainable city” OR “smart and sustainable cities”23512766
#4“sustainable and smart city” OR “sustainable and smart cities”311316
#5“sustainable city” AND “smart city” OR “sustainable cities” AND “smart cities”715911265
#6“sustainable and smart urban” OR “smart and sustainable urban”717821
#7“sustainable development of smart city” OR “sustainable development of smart cities”214316
#8“sustainable development” AND “smart city” OR “sustainable development” AND “smart cities”17310231031
#9“sustainability” AND “smart city” OR “sustainability” AND “smart cities”3973148998
Extensive scientific field of SSC (#1 OR #2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 OR #7 OR #8 OR #9 OR)16511172151804
Publications directly related to SSC covered by detailed bibliometric analysis355489
The final number of publications on SSC covered by the network analysis539
Table 4. The number of publications and total citations related to the SC literature.
Table 4. The number of publications and total citations related to the SC literature.
Web of Science Scopus
YearNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal CitationsNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal Citations
1991110000
1992010000
1993120000
1994023000
1995026000
1996021000
1997020110
1998020120
1999460461
200017018248
20011800248
200219122611
20030912285
2004110012918
2005010113016
2006313033313
2007114213410
2008317664028
200982519185835
2010154022369444
2011488836124218137
20129017889217435317
2013271449248486921884
201452797689779717182261
2015104620222364118729054690
2016161136334735193148368556
20172289592292604190902615,194
20182316823814,946530714,33327,792
20191450968816,979423618,56934,094
2020696947812618,6951162
Table 5. The number of publications and total citations related to the SuC literature.
Table 5. The number of publications and total citations related to the SuC literature.
Web of Science Scopus
YearNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal CitationsNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal Citations
1983000110
1991110230
19929100472
199311105121
199471809217
199513310103110
199613441255618
199716609126824
1998218111218947
199921102242010960
200018120193114055
200115135291415468
2002291644234188104
200328192402221098
2004312236133243124
2005322558729272161
20063529012861333238
20073632618860393292
20083235821864457419
20094139930860517529
20107247142599616643
2011101572561154770855
2012896617241329021151
201310576694416110631523
2014113879130319212551886
20151661045168718214372248
20162421287219320716442670
20173061593299430019443867
20183201913397937823225140
20192472160428632626485773
20201216113302678209
Table 6. The number of publications and total citations related to the SSC literature.
Table 6. The number of publications and total citations related to the SSC literature.
Web of Science Scopus
YearNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal CitationsNumber of PublicationsCumulative Number of PublicationsTotal Citations
2005110000
2006010000
2007010000
2008010110
2009010010
2010120010
2011020120
2012131462
201358214209
2014162423214159
201529531163980175
2016308316754134242
20178516844780214580
20181042728691423561235
20198335512931294851907
202003553448973
Table 7. Most frequently used words and keywords in the SSC literature.
Table 7. Most frequently used words and keywords in the SSC literature.
Author KeywordsOccurrencesWords in TitlesOccurrencesWords in AbstractsOccurrences
Smart city168Smart478Smart1833
Smart cities113Cities309City1387
Sustainability72Sustainable272Cities1379
Sustainable city42City220Sustainable966
Sustainable development40Urban103Urban897
Smart sustainable cities37Sustainability81Development607
Sustainable cities37Development79Data442
Internet of things29Data46Sustainability426
ICT26Case38Paper404
Urban sustainability25Planning35Energy331

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Janik, A.; Ryszko, A.; Szafraniec, M. Scientific Landscape of Smart and Sustainable Cities Literature: A Bibliometric Analysis. Sustainability 2020, 12, 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030779

AMA Style

Janik A, Ryszko A, Szafraniec M. Scientific Landscape of Smart and Sustainable Cities Literature: A Bibliometric Analysis. Sustainability. 2020; 12(3):779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030779

Chicago/Turabian Style

Janik, Agnieszka, Adam Ryszko, and Marek Szafraniec. 2020. "Scientific Landscape of Smart and Sustainable Cities Literature: A Bibliometric Analysis" Sustainability 12, no. 3: 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030779

APA Style

Janik, A., Ryszko, A., & Szafraniec, M. (2020). Scientific Landscape of Smart and Sustainable Cities Literature: A Bibliometric Analysis. Sustainability, 12(3), 779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030779

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop