Abstract

UAS (Unmanned Aircraft Systems) technologies, also known as UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle), drones, or Remotely Piloted Aircraft System (RPAS) and GIS (Geographic Information System) are recognised for the value of the results that can be achieved by their combined use. However, their use and the results achieved are rarely framed within the context of Digital Era Governance (DEG), an undertaking that would significantly reduce the capabilities of knowledge transfer from the academic and/or private environment to the public domain. The purpose of this study was to highlight, by a bibliometric analysis, the areas of proposed use of this team of tools and the extent to which these can enter the sphere of interest of public administrations, especially local ones. From a methodological point of view, based on the 439 articles filtered from the Web of Science database where UAS/UAV and GIS technologies were used, several bibliometric analyses have emerged. VOSviewer and R (Bibliometrix tool) were used to conduct the bibliometric analyses. Most scientific publications that used UAV technology as a working tool have predominant applicability in photogrammetry, while GIS applications are found in publications dedicated to image processing, landslides, and cultural and archaeological heritage. We point out that from the point of view of international cooperation, at the level of institutions or countries, certain international organisations from the USA, China, and the central and northern European states have a high interest in this topic, and a low cooperation between academia and public administration is exhibited. The conclusion is represented by the apparent lack of framing of the results of UAS–GIS technologies usage into wider and more topical contexts, such as digital era governance, and also a reduced applicability of the research results.

Highlights

  • Digital era governance (DEG) is the descendant of New Public Management (NPM), a dominant set of theoretical and practical ideas related to management and governance from the 1985–2002 time period

  • The size of the nodes reflected the frequency of the keywords, while the thickness of the line is directly proportional to the interrelation degree of the keywords

  • Most representative clusters were those dominated by Unmanned Aircraft Vehicles (UAV) and Geographic Information Systems (GIS), followed by the clusters governed by photogrammetry and remote sensing

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Digital era governance (DEG) is the descendant of New Public Management (NPM), a dominant set of theoretical and practical ideas related to management and governance from the 1985–2002 time period. Digital era governance means an entire complex of changes, whose main core of concerns are the changes in IT and information management but develop simultaneously in more dimensions than in the previous case [1,2]. This concept is associated with those of Public Value Management and. New Public Governance, all three insisting on the cooperation in partnership, promoting governance, and innovation, and acknowledging the transformation potential of the digital technology [3]. According to Kosenkov et al [4], digital governance has six dimensions: information dissemination, communication with citizens, service delivery, socioeconomic monitoring, advanced social analytics, and regulation of social life.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call