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Introduction—The Hacker, the City and Their Institutions: From Grassroots Urbanism to Systemic Change

Authors :
de Waal, Martijn
de Lange, Michiel
Lectoraat Civic Interaction Design
Hogeschool van Amsterdam
Source :
The Hackable City: Digital Media and Collaborative City-Making in the Network Society, 1-22, STARTPAGE=1;ENDPAGE=22;TITLE=The Hackable City, The Hackable City, 1. Springer, STARTPAGE=1;TITLE=The Hackable City, The Hackable City ISBN: 9789811326936
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Singapore, 2019.

Abstract

In the debate about smart cities, an alternative to a dominant top-down, tech-driven solutionist approach has arisen in examples of ‘civic hacking’. Hacking here refers to the playful, exploratory, collaborative and sometimes transgressive modes of operation found in various hacker cultures, this time constructively applied in the context of civics. It suggests a novel logic to organise urban society through social and digital media platforms, moving away from centralised urban planning towards a more inclusive process of city-making, creating new types of public spaces. This book takes this urban imaginary of a hackable city seriously, using hacking as a lens to explore examples of collaborative city-making enabled by digital media technologies. Five different perspectives are discussed. Hacking can be understood as (1) an ethos, a particular articulation of citizenship in the network era; (2) as a set of iterative and collaborative city-making practices, bringing out new roles and relations between citizens, (design) professionals and institutional actors; (3) a set of affordances of institutional structures that allow or discourage their appropriation; (4) a critical lens to bring in notions of democratic governance, power struggles and conflict of interests into the debate on collaborative city-making; and (5) a point of departure for action research. After a discussion of these themes, the various chapters in the book are briefly introduced. Taken together they contribute to a wider debate about practices of technology-enabled collaborative city-making, and the question how city hacking may mature from the tactical level of smart and often playful interventions to a strategic level of enduring impact.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Hackable City: Digital Media and Collaborative City-Making in the Network Society, 1-22, STARTPAGE=1;ENDPAGE=22;TITLE=The Hackable City, The Hackable City, 1. Springer, STARTPAGE=1;TITLE=The Hackable City, The Hackable City ISBN: 9789811326936
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d5cd0fa83bfe2666e421ab30b0df2c8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2694-3_1