Social justice implications of smart urban technologies: an intersectional approach

Q1 Engineering Buildings & cities Pub Date : 2023-06-15 DOI:10.5334/bc.290
N. Sharma, Tom Hargreaves, Helen Pallett
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Abstract

Techno-optimistic visions around smart buildings, homes, cities, grids, healthcare, etc. have become ubiquitous over the past decade. Using variations of machine learning and artificial intelligence, smart urbanism (SU) envisions an efficient, digital society. However, research shows that smart technologies reinscribe inequalities by prioritising the interests of the free market, technology-centric governance and data monetisation. Although there has been a growing concern over the injustices SU perpetuates, there is a lack of systematic engagement with power systems such as capitalism or heterosexism that underpin SU visions. A novel framework is presented that situates intersectional justice at the heart of SU. A mapping of 70 cases of ‘trouble’ with the promises of SU is used to address three core research questions: What are the ‘troubles’ with SU? To what extent are they intersectional? What can intersectionality add to the development of a just SU? The analysis shows how SU politics play out in relation to how users are understood and engaged, how different actors institutionalise SU and how dominant power systems are challenged. The presented strategy contributes to understanding not just the data politics in urban spaces, but also how they can be renegotiated and re-evaluated to solve multiple and interconnected urban crises without compromising on social justice. Practice relevance Citizen-led initiatives against SU should commit to intersectionality’s radical core to dismantle power structures to ensure local smart urban projects do not entrench global business-as-usual neoliberal agendas. Intersectional thinking can create spaces for deliberative dialogues between civil society groups and build alliances across groups that seek to challenge the hegemony of exclusionary urban policies. Urban planners and local governments, which are at the forefront of SU applications, should decentre technologies and rather focus efforts on working out how smart technologies can work in conjunction with other kinds of urban interventions, such as social, economic and environmental policy changes, collaborative planning, community development, etc. to herald more just urban futures. Designers of smart urban technologies should apply intersectional approaches to further challenge ‘Homo economicus’ (rational, White, technophilic, able-bodied) as the primary user type and to replace it with diverse user archetypes that express humanity, justice and generosity.
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智能城市技术对社会正义的影响:一种交叉方法
在过去的十年里,围绕智能建筑、家庭、城市、电网、医疗保健等的技术乐观愿景变得无处不在。利用机器学习和人工智能的变体,智慧城市主义(SU)设想了一个高效的数字社会。然而,研究表明,智能技术通过优先考虑自由市场、以技术为中心的治理和数据货币化的利益,重新加剧了不平等。尽管人们越来越关注SU长期存在的不公正,但缺乏与资本主义或异性恋等权力系统的系统接触,这些权力系统支撑着SU的愿景。本文提出了一个新的框架,将交叉正义置于SU的核心位置。70个SU承诺的“麻烦”案例的映射用于解决三个核心研究问题:SU的“麻烦”是什么?它们在多大程度上是交叉的?交叉性能给公正SU的发展带来什么?分析显示了SU政治如何与用户如何被理解和参与有关,不同的参与者如何将SU制度化,以及主导权力系统如何受到挑战。本文提出的策略不仅有助于理解城市空间中的数据政治,还有助于理解如何对数据政治进行重新协商和评估,以在不损害社会正义的情况下解决多重和相互关联的城市危机。实践相关性:公民领导的反对SU的倡议应该致力于交叉性的激进核心,即拆除权力结构,以确保地方智能城市项目不会巩固全球商业照常的新自由主义议程。交叉思考可以为民间社会团体之间的协商对话创造空间,并在寻求挑战排他性城市政策霸权的团体之间建立联盟。城市规划者和地方政府处于人工智能应用的前沿,他们应该分散技术,而不是集中精力研究智能技术如何与其他类型的城市干预措施(如社会、经济和环境政策变化、协作规划、社区发展等)相结合,以预示更公正的城市未来。智能城市技术的设计者应该采用交叉方法进一步挑战“经济人”(理性、白人、技术爱好者、健全)作为主要用户类型,并以表达人性、正义和慷慨的多样化用户原型取而代之。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
25 weeks
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