Detecting contagious spreading of urban innovations on the global city network
Niklas H. Kitzmann, Pawel Romanczuk, Jonathan F. Donges

TL;DR
This paper develops a method to detect contagious spreading of sustainability policies among cities via global networks, revealing that city actions are influenced by complex contagion effects beyond simple network structure or adoption rates.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach to identify network-based contagion effects in urban innovation diffusion, applied to real data on public transport and flight networks.
Findings
Evidence of contagion in sustainability policy adoption
Network effects influence city decision-making beyond simple connectivity
Methodology applicable to various inter-city network types
Abstract
Only a fast and global transformation towards decarbonization and sustainability can keep the Earth in a civilization-friendly state. As hotspots for (green) innovation and experimentation, cities could play an important role in this transition. They are also known to profit from each other's ideas, with policy and technology innovations spreading to other cities. In this way, cities can be conceptualized as nodes in a globe-spanning learning network. The dynamics of this process are important for society's response to climate change and other challenges, but remain poorly understood on a macroscopic level. In this contribution, we develop an approach to identify whether network-based complex contagion effects are a feature of sustainability policy adoption by cities, based on dose-response contagion and surrogate data models. We apply this methodology to an example data set, comprising…
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