Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title Big Data, Big Rhetoric in Toronto's Smart City
ID_Doc 38127
Authors Tierney, TF
Title Big Data, Big Rhetoric in Toronto's Smart City
Year 2019
Published Architecture And Culture, 7, 3
DOI 10.1080/20507828.2019.1631062
Abstract While acknowledging the city as a site of disciplinary and technological disruption, this paper introduces Bratton's stack theory as a way to understand smart cities more generally, and Waterfront Toronto specifically. We build on Bratton's position by closely examining twenty-first century histories and anthropologies related to the internet, privacy, and the dominance of big data. Our principal concern is with the transformation of personal and environmental data into an economic resource. Seen through that particular lens, we argue that Toronto's smart city has internalized relations of colonization whereby the economic objectives of a multinational technology company take on new configurations at a local level of human (and non-human) information extraction-thereby restructuring not only public land, but also everyday life into a zone of unmitigated consumption.
Author Keywords urban studies; smart cities; network technologies; Internet of Things; data privacy; urban planning; citizen participation
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
EID WOS:000493590500001
WoS Category Architecture
Research Area Architecture
PDF
Similar atricles
Scroll