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Equality in the City: Imaginaries of the Smart Future [Kõva köide]

Series edited by , Edited by (University College Dublin)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 244x170x17 mm, kaal: 662 g, 29 Illustrations, color; 3 Halftones, black and white
  • Sari: Mediated Cities
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jan-2022
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789384648
  • ISBN-13: 9781789384642
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 244x170x17 mm, kaal: 662 g, 29 Illustrations, color; 3 Halftones, black and white
  • Sari: Mediated Cities
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jan-2022
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789384648
  • ISBN-13: 9781789384642
Teised raamatud teemal:
This collection considers the city of the future and its relationship to its citizens. It responds to the foregrounding of digital technologies in the management of urban spaces, and addresses some of the ways in which technologies are changing the places in which we live and the way we live in them.





A broad range of interdisciplinary contributors reflect on the global agenda of smart cities, the ruptures in smart discourse and the spaces where we might envisage a more user-friendly and bottom-up version of the smart future. The authors adopt an equality studies lens to assess how we might conceive of a future smart city and what fissures need to be addressed to ensure the smart future is equitable. In the project of envisaging this, they consider various approaches and arguments for equality in the imagined future city, putting people at the forefront of our discussions, rather than technologies.





In the smart discourse, hard data, technological solutions, global and national policy and macro issues tend to dominate. Here, the authors include ethnographic evidence, rather than rely on the perspective of the smart technologies experts, so that the arena for meaningful social development of the smart future can develop.





The international contributors respond purposefully to the smart imperative, to the disruptive potential of smart technologies in our cities: issues of change, design, austerity, ownership, citizenship and equality. The collection examines the pull between equality and engagement in smart futures. To date, the topic of smart cities has been approached from the perspective of digital media, human geography and information communications technology. This collection, however, presents a different angle. It seeks to open new discussions about what a smart future could do to bridge divides, to look at governmentality in the context of (in)equality in the city. The collection is an approachable discussion of the issues that surround smart digital futures and the imagined digital cities of the future. It is aspirational in that it seeks to imagine a truly egalitarian city of the future and to ponder how that might come about.





Primary readership will be academics and students in social science, architecture, urban planning, government employees, and those working or studying in social justice and equality studies

Arvustused

'One of the strengths of this book is that its authors bridge familiar planning and broader urban studies theory with the contemporary challenges of new technology deployment. This bridging helps ground our engagement with the complexity of new technologies in our long-standing obligation to equitably evaluate how new changes in communities will affect all of our residents.





Planners reading this book will gain insight into how we might engage our residents in civic conversations about new technology adoption. [ ...] Individually and collectively, these chapters will help planners think more critically about the challenges and opportunities new technologies bring before we implement them. Equality in the City has many chapters that could be used in planning theory classes, allowing learners to see how the planning and urbanism theories that have long informed our practice also shed important light on new trends.' -- Pamela Robinson, Journal of the American Planning Association

List of Figures
ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction 1(14)
Susan Flynn
SECTION 1 URBAN CRISIS
15(90)
1 Locked Down in the Neo-Liberal Smart City: A-Systemic Technologies in Crisis
17(22)
Eleanor Dare
2 If (Equality)
39(19)
Delfina Fantini van Ditmar
3 Reading Lefebvre's Right to the City in the Age of the Internet
58(21)
Alan Reeve
4 Universities, Equality and the Neo-Liberal City
79(26)
Richard Hayes
SECTION 2 CITY DESIGN
105(90)
5 Universal Smart City Design
107(20)
Eoghan Conor O'Shea
6 The Design and Public Imaginaries of Smart Street Furniture
127(22)
Justine Humphry
Sophia Maalsen
Justine Gangneux
Chris Chesher
Matt Hanchard
Simon Joss
Peter Merrington
Bridgette Wessels
7 Co-Creating Place and Creativity Through Media Architecture: The InstaBooth
149(21)
Glenda Caldwell
8 Narratives, Inequalities and Civic Participation: A Case for More-Than-TechnologicaP Approaches to Smart City Development
170(25)
Carla Maria Kayanan
Niamh Moore-Cherry
Alma Clavin
SECTION 3 SPATIAL HUMANISM
195(72)
9 Building Participatory City 2.0: Folksonomy, Taxonomy, Hyperhumanism
197(23)
Carl Smith
Fred Garnett
Manuel Laranja
10 Psychogeography: Reimagining and Re-Enchanting the Smart City
220(40)
Adrian Sledmere
11 Afterword: Decentring the Smart City
260(7)
Rob Kitchin
Contributors 267
Dr. Susan Flynn is a lecturer at the School of Education and Lifelong Learning at Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland.