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Chapter 1. The World is Urban Chapter 2. How to Think About Smart Cities Chapter 3. City of Technology: Where the Streets are Paved with Data Chapter 4. Who Governs? State-driven Smart Cities Chapter 5. Who Governs? Private Smart Cities Chapter 6. Who Governs? Citizens Chapter 7. The Urban Imaginary: Myths and Markets Chapter 8. Whose Smart City?
'This is an insightful, informative book that takes a critical, informed look into a technology-driven development from a social sense perspective.'
'The Smart City in a Digital World is already a classic book summarizing and adapting Vincent Mosco’s thinking to the new mythology of contemporary societies: smart cities. The smartness of our cities is not made by people, but by technologies. The smartness is an obliged future all the cities should aim for. The smartness is a political idea created by a mix of business interests, surveillance capitalism, and neoliberism. Smart cities are, at the end, another mythology brought by digitalization with strong effects on the ways humans live together in big cities. But another way is possible and Mosco, in the last pages, proposes a manifesto for the smart cities, placing humans at the center of them.'
The author describes democratic alternatives to the view that what makes a city smart is only technology, arguing that people make cities smart and that smart cities begin with a vibrant democracy, support for public space, and a commitment to citizens' control over technology. He integrates discussion of climate change into the discussion of urban issues, controversies, and alternatives to the smart city concept. He draws on case studies from around the world to discuss various meanings of smart cities; the history of the smart city concept; technologies involved in the infrastructure of smart cities and how they are increasingly integrated into urban life; smart city governance by the state, private businesses, and citizens; myths, imaginaries, and ideologies of cities and what they might become; and the problems and potential of smart cities.
“This is a book that challenges the current excitement about ‘smart cities’, a buzzword that Vincent Mosco critically dissects as another of the ‘sublime visions’, like ‘garden cities’ and ‘postmodern cities’, that continually resurface as urban mythologies… an important source for urban studies and communications scholars as well as urban planners, technology students, sociologists and political economists and others concerned about the future of cities as spaces for people and not just for private profit.”