Africa's rapid urbanization, with its urban population projected to reach 1.3 billion by 2050, presents both unprecedented challenges and opportunities for sustainable development. Cameroon exemplifies this dynamic, with urban populations increasing from 52% in 2015 to 60% in 2025, concentrated in major hubs like Douala and Yaounde. However, this growth confronts acute governance challenges including unplanned peri-urban expansion, infrastructure deficits affecting 47-60% of residents in informal settlements, and jurisdictional fragmentation across ministries, councils, and customary authorities. This study evaluates smart-city prospects in Cameroon through the lens of entrenched urban governance challenges, drawing on mixed-methods research including institutional analysis (N=52 documents), key informant interviews (N=42), household surveys (N=320), and geospatial analysis. Findings reveal that while Cameroon possesses robust mobile penetration (78% smartphone ownership) and nascent digital infrastructure, institutional fragmentation—with overlapping mandates between MINDCAF, MINHDU, 374 councils (only 20% fully operational), and traditional chiefs controlling 80% of customary land—undermines smart-city coordination. Digital divides persist, with formal urban cores averaging 85% 4G coverage versus 42% in peri-urban areas where most residents reside. The study proposes context-appropriate pathways including unified digital cadastres integrating customary and statutory systems, low-bandwidth SMS/USSD innovations for flood early warning and waste management, and hybrid governance infrastructures embedding chiefs in digital validation processes. These recommendations align with Cameroon's 2025 FAO National Land Policy platform and Law No. 2019/024 decentralization mandates, positioning inclusive smart urbanism as a catalyst for transformative governance reform.
Foukou et al. (Fri,) studied this question.