ISBN:
9781487527181
,
9781487527174
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (vii, 434 Seiten)
,
Illustrationen, Karten
Series Statement:
Technoscience and Society
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Digital (in)justice in the smart city
DDC:
307.76
Keywords:
Electronic books
;
Smart City
;
Soziale Gerechtigkeit
;
Stadtplanung
;
Digitalisierung
;
Neue Technologie
Abstract:
This book explores relations between smartness and social justice, and questions whether working toward more just and sustainable cities requires that we look beyond the limitations of "smartness" altogether.
Abstract:
Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Introduction: Towards Urban Digital Justice: The Smart City as an Empty Signifier -- Part One: Challenging the Foundations of Smart -- 1 Who Is Telling the Smart City Story? Feminist Diffractions of Smart Cities -- 2 More Queer, More than Human: Challenges for Thinking Digital Justice in the Smart City -- 3 Urbanists in the Smart City: Sidewalks, Sidewalk Labs, and the Limits to "Complexity" -- 4 The Evolution of Splintering Urbanism in Planetary Information Ecosystems -- 5 Cybernetic Urbanism: Tracing the Development of the Responsibilized Subject and Self-Organizing Communities in Smart Cities -- Part Two: Data Decisioning and Data Justice -- 6 Articulating Urban Collectives with Data -- 7 Coding Out Justice: Digital Platforms' Enclosure of Public Transit in Cities -- 8 Epistemic (In)justice in a Smart City: Proto-Smart and Post-Smart Infrastructures for Urban Data -- 9 The Politics of Re-membering: Inequity, Governance, and Biodegradable Data in the Smart City -- Part Three: Infrastructures of Injustice -- 10 Good and Evil in the Autonomous City -- 11 Pornhub Helps: Digital Corporations in Italian Pandemic Cities -- 12 Trajectories of Data-Driven Urbanism and the Case of Intelligent Transport Systems -- 13 The Parking Problem and the Limits of Urban Digitalization -- 14 On the Contradictions of the (Climate) Smart City in the Context of Socio-environmental Crisis -- Part Four: Complicated and Complicating Digital Divides -- 15 Decolonizing the Smart City: Excess and Appropriation of Uber Eats in Santiago de Chile -- 16 Does Formalization Make a City Smarter? Towards Post-Elitist Smart Cities -- 17 The Smart City and COVID-19: New Digital Divides amid Hyperconnectivity -- 18 Beyond the Digital Divide: Libraries Enabling the Just Smart City.
Note:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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