Urban Platforms: Uploading the City

Part three of our four-part series on cities and technology attempts to grapple with the urban platform, platform urbanism, and the messy consequences of implementing these approaches in cities. Is a city like a platform, or is it a platform? What kinds of data do urban platforms need to operate, and what kinds of subjects do those data make? This episode features excerpts from all six scholars in the series who untangle these threads and challenge the assumptions of tech-driven policies.

Guests 

David Banks, SUNY, University at Albany 

Ryan Burns, University of Calgary 

Ayonna Datta, University College London 

Shannon Mattern, University of Pennsylvania 

Erin McElroy, University of Washington 

John Stehlin, University of North Carolina at Greensboro 

Reading List 

David Banks (2023), The City Authentic: How the Attention Economy Builds Urban America

Ryan Burns & Preston Welker (2022), “’Make our communities better through data’: The moral economy of smart city labor,” Big Data & Society 9:1.

Ayona Datta (2020), “The ‘smart safe city’: Gendered time, speed, and violence in the margins of India’s urban age,” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 110:5.

Ayona Datta & Nabeela Ahmed (2020), “Intimate infrastructures: The rubrics of gendered safety and urban violence in Kerala, India,” Geoforum 110.

Shannon Mattern (2018), “Maintenance and care,” Places.

Erin McElroy (2017), “Mediating the tech boom: Temporalities of displacement and resistance,” Media-N 13:1.

Erin McElroy (2022), “Digital cartographies of displacement: Data as property and property as data,” Acme: An international journal for critical geographies 21:4.

Erin McElroy (2023), “Dis/Possessory data politics: From tenant screening to anti-eviction organizing,” IJURR 47:1.

Mike Hodson, Julia Kasmire, Andrew McMeekin, John Stehlin, Kevin Ward (Eds.) (2020), Urban platforms and the future city: Transformations in infrastructure, governance, knowledge and everyday life. Routledge.

Dillon Mahmoudi, Anthony M. Levenda, John Stehlin (2020), “Political economies of platform urbanism: digital labor and data,” in Urban Platforms and the Future City, pp. 40-52.

John Stehlin & Will Payne (2022), “Disposable infrastructures: ‘Micromobility’ platforms and the political economy of transport disruption in Austin, Texas,” Urban Studies.

Credits 

Many thanks to the Lindy Institute for Urban Innovation at Drexel University, the managing editors at Urban Affairs Review, and our guests for sharing their time and insights with us. The show’s music is “Hundred Mile” by K2, courtesy of Blue Dot Sessions. 

Producer and sound engineer: David Weems, Drexel University 

Executive Producer and writer: Emily Holloway, Associate Managing Editor, Urban Affairs Review.  

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