Title |
Smart city as anti-planning in the UK |
ID_Doc |
45156 |
Authors |
Cowley, R; Caprotti, F |
Title |
Smart city as anti-planning in the UK |
Year |
2019 |
Published |
Environment And Planning D-Society & Space, 37, 3 |
DOI |
10.1177/0263775818787506 |
Abstract |
Critical commentaries have often treated the smart city as a potentially problematic 'top down' tendency within policy-making and urban planning, which appears to serve the interests of already powerful corporate and political actors. This article, however, positions the smart city as significant in its implicit rejection of the strong normativity of traditional technologies of planning, in favour of an ontology of efficiency and emergence. It explores a series of prominent UK smart city initiatives (in Bristol, Manchester and Milton Keynes) as bundles of experimental local practices, drawing on the literature pointing to a growing valorisation of the 'experimental' over strong policy commitments in urban governance. It departs from this literature, however, by reading contemporary 'smart experiments' through Shapin and Schafer's work on the emergence of 17th-century science, to advance a transhistorical understanding of experimentation as oriented towards societal reordering. From this perspective, the UK smart city merits attention primarily as an indicator of a wider set of shifts in approaches to governance. Its pragmatic orientation sits uneasily alongside ambitions to 'standardise' smart and sustainable urban development; and raises questions about the conscious overlap between the stated practical ambitions of smart city initiatives and pre-existing environmental and social policies. |
Author Keywords |
Urban experiments; smart city; sustainable cities; urban governance; experimental governance |
Index Keywords |
Index Keywords |
Document Type |
Other |
Open Access |
Open Access |
Source |
Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) |
EID |
WOS:000470854700004 |
WoS Category |
Environmental Studies; Geography |
Research Area |
Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography |
PDF |
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0263775818787506
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