Prioritizing smart city themes for multi-national enterprises and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

Article


Sharma, N., Kumar, R., Vihari, N.S., Arora, M. and Saini, J.R. 2025. Prioritizing smart city themes for multi-national enterprises and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability. 17 (10). https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104251
TypeArticle
TitlePrioritizing smart city themes for multi-national enterprises and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
AuthorsSharma, N., Kumar, R., Vihari, N.S., Arora, M. and Saini, J.R.
Abstract

Cities’ role as major hubs of human activity and economic development is essential in attaining sustainable development, fostering a balance between economic, social, and environmental development, especially in light of the growing concern over Anthropocene-induced environmental issues like global warming and climate change. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) represent a historic call for coordinated international action in this area, with SDG 11 specifically identifying “Sustainable Cities and Communities” as a primary objective. Therefore, it is clear that a paradigm shift in our approach to these challenges in terms of our thinking, sensibility, behavior, and responses is necessary. Implicitly, in view of their pivotal role in environmental sustainability, development of “smart” cities as healthy, citizen-friendly, economically viable, and sustainable cities for our future generations in today’s globally integrated world, as predominant centers of human settlement and activity with multinational enterprises driving economic growth, gains the immediate attention of researchers. In this light, this study aims to identify and thereafter prioritize key indicators of a smart city using the structured and consistency-focused best–worst multi-criteria decision-making (BWM) method, suitable for expert-driven decision-making with limited comparisons. While the UN’s SDG 11 promotes safe and resilient cities, our findings suggest a disparity in how local officials prioritize certain dimensions such as safety or recreation. This disconnect warrants closer examination of localized policy drivers. The findings of this study indicate that according to experts, among others, the priority themes are, in order, water and sanitation, wastewater, health, the environment, and the economy. Thus, these represent a key take-away for multinational enterprises for identifying and assessing significant thrust domains and areas of opportunity for intervention and contribution to the UN SDGs. It also enables a replicable framework for synergy between the public and private sectors towards contrastive intervention in other cities across the globe.

KeywordsUN; SDG; smart city; sustainability; multinational enterprises; best–worst method
Sustainable Development Goals11 Sustainable cities and communities
Middlesex University ThemeSustainability
PublisherMDPI AG
JournalSustainability
ISSN
Electronic2071-1050
Publication dates
Online08 May 2025
Print02 May 2025
Publication process dates
Submitted22 Feb 2025
Accepted28 Apr 2025
Deposited30 Jun 2025
Output statusPublished
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Copyright Statement

© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104251
LanguageEnglish
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