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International Perception and Local Pride in Smart City Development: The Case of Hong Kong

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2024

Calvin Ming Tsun Lai
Affiliation:
Lead author, Department of Architecture, The Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
Alistair Cole*
Affiliation:
Co-author and corresponding author, Head of the Government and International Studies Department, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
*
Corresponding author: Email: alistaircole@hkbu.edu.hk
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Abstract

Local citizens’ perceptions of their own cities are often neglected when assessing cities’ performance. Using the perceived international image and collective pride in Hong Kong as the entry point, this article aims to discover the relationship between citizens’ trust in public authorities and urban technologies. Four angles of investigation are developed: the impact of cities’ promotion of their international image on local pride; the attitudinal and demographic characteristics of proud citizens; the linkage of local pride with public trust, and digital trust. This article uses data from a Hong Kong-based territory-wide survey in 2021 to conduct the analysis. The result suggests that public trust is an elemental factor having a positive relationship with collective pride and digital trust in Hong Kong. This article also identifies the group of citizens with the least pride. Regaining the citizen's trust is the best remedy for facilitating smart city development.

Information

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Institute for East Asian Studies
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Table 1. City rankings (*Q11: Which of the following cities do you think are doing the best in the development of smart city? [“Don't know” and “Refuse to answer” as missing data])

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Table 2. Six questions for analysis

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Table 3. Analyses and applied statistical techniques

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Figure 1. Presenting the theoretical model

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Figure 2. Pride in the city and international ranking

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Figure 3. Pride in smart cities in Hong Kong and Asia

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Table 4. Age, educational attainment and international comparisons of the smart city: a multinomial logistic regression (*p < 0.05)

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Figure 4. Age and the development of smart cities in Asia

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Figure 5. Educational attainment and the development of smart cities in Asia

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Figure 6. Occupation and the development of smart cities in Asia

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Figure 7. Region of birth and the development of smart cities in Asia

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Figure 8. Political inclination and the development of smart cities in Asia

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Figure 9. Political orientations and city preferences

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Figure 10. Political orientations and pride in Hong Kong

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Figure 11. Support for developing Hong Kong as a smart city according to the selection of the best smart city

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Table 5. Trust in Hong Kong public authorities according to perceptions of the best smart city: a multinomial logistic regression (*p < 0.05)

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Table 6. Correlations between trust in public authorities and pride in Hong Kong (**p < 0.01)

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Table 7. Trust in the providers of smart city services

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Table 8. Correlations between the acceptance of urban technologies and pride in Hong Kong (**p < 0.01)

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Table 9. Demographic markers indicating pride in Hong Kong

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Figure 12. Substantiating the theoretical model