Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover -- Half Title -- Equality in the City: Imaginaries of the Smart Future -- Copyright Page -- Epigraph -- Table of contents -- Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Equality -- Technological solutionism -- Citizens -- Urban crisis -- City design -- Spatial humanism -- References -- Section 1 Urban Crisis -- 1 Locked Down in the Neo-Liberal Smart City: A-Systemic Technologies in Crisis -- Introduction -- Unprecedented efficiency, connectivity and social harmony? -- Virtual and algorithmic smart cities -- Broken infrastructures -- Just smart cities -- Conclusion -- References -- 2 Int 'smart':: cities (void) -- Introduction -- 'Smart' incongruences -- China: Kashgar, Xinjiang - the 'smart' prison -- India: Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh - the concrete on halt farm -- Canada: Quayside, Toronto - Google urbanism -- An imperative 'smart' comprehensive assessment -- References -- 3 Reading Lefebvre's Right to the City in the Age of the Internet -- Introduction -- Negotiating rights to the city in virtual space: The panopticon, agonism and the echo chamber -- The internet as two-way panopticon -- Popular culture, citizen power and the internet -- Agonism and the risk of the 'echo chamber' -- The form and the management of the smart city: Justice and the right to the city -- Reproducing inequalities: The real and the virtual city -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 4 Universities, Equality and the Neo-Liberal City -- Introduction -- Universities: 'anchors' or 'ivory towers'? -- The use of universities -- Strategic priorities in Ireland -- Neo-liberal urbanization -- Alternatives and responses -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Section 2 City Design -- 5 Universal Smart City Design -- Introduction -- Inclusive smart cities -- Technotopia -- Inclusion of smart citizens -- Capabilities of smart citizens -- Universal smart city design.
Principle 1: Equitable use -- Social integration -- Personalization -- Cultural appropriateness -- Principle 2: Flexibility in use -- Principle 3: Simple and intuitive use -- Principle 4: Perceptible information -- Principle 5: Tolerance for error -- Principle 6: Low physical effort -- Principle 7: Size and space for approach and use -- Discussion: Wellness in the coordinated smart city -- Conclusion -- References -- 6 The Design and Public Imaginaries of Smart Street Furniture -- Introduction -- Smart citizens: Imaginaries of the smart citizen -- Seeing public imaginaries through smart street furniture -- Methods and analysis -- InLinkUK and Strawberry Energy's imaginaries of the end users of smart kiosks/benches -- Young, mobile and connected -- Smart and sustainable -- Essential, but for whom? -- Imagined publics versus actual publics -- The passive user -- The active user -- The imagined other user -- Discussion and conclusion -- Notes -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 7 Co-creating Place and Creativity Through Media Architecture: The InstaBooth -- Introduction -- Background and research design: Place, community and media architecture -- The InstaBooth -- Deployment 1: Brisbane Writers Festival -- Deployment 2: Pomona -- Methods -- Findings -- Cognitive dimensions -- Providing a platform -- Place of learning -- Affective dimensions -- Feelings on community -- Behavioural dimensions -- Hope for the future -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- 8 Narratives, Inequalities and Civic Participation: A Case for 'More-Than-Technological' Approaches to Smart City Development -- Introduction -- The Dublin context -- Case study 1: Smart Docklands -- Case study 2: A Playful City -- The context for the project -- How does A Playful City work? -- Case study 3: Mapping Green Dublin -- Engaging a greening community -- Discussion -- Concluding thoughts.
Notes -- References -- Section 3 Spatial Humanism -- 9 Building Participatory City 2.0: Folksonomy, Taxonomy, Hyperhumanism -- Introduction -- Folksonomy -- Taxonomy -- Hyperhumanism -- Towards a folksonomy of the city -- Social cities not smart cities (cities for people not technocrats) -- Voluntary community in context or virtual communities decontextualized? -- This chapter -- The Origin of Spaces, City 2.0 and folksonomy of the city -- Social Cities of Tomorrow: Conclusions -- Ambient Learning City (MOSI-ALONG) and a folksonomy of emerging 'participatory practice' -- The Origin of Spaces: Towards a folksonomy of the city -- The Origin of Spaces: 'Folksonomy' -- Sharing participatory city practices after #oosEU -- Third places and urban regeneration -- How to make City 2.0 participatory: A five-step model -- Step 1: Setting a 'place' - gathering the resources -- Step 2: Attracting, promoting collaboration and building a community ecosystem -- Step 3: Building a community -- Step 4: Extend to the city - connect your space community to other city space(s) -- Step 5: Connecting citywide ecosystems to other cities -- Hyperhumanism -- Values of hyperhumanism -- Internet of fungus -- Context engineering -- Web 2.0: From rhizomatic learner to rhizomatic citizen -- Afterword -- References -- 10 Psychogeography: Reimagining and Re-Enchanting the Smart City -- Introduction -- The smart city -- Psychogeography -- Surrealism -- The situationists -- Psychogeography (Iain Sinclair) -- More walking -- The irrational -- A changing London -- My London (the emergence of non-places) -- Burgess Park -- Discovery -- The ancestral connection -- Burgess Park: A brief history -- Burgess Park and gentrification -- Burgess park: The revamp -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Afterword: Decentring the Smart City -- References -- Contributors -- Back Cover.
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