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Code and the City

Code and the City

Authors
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Year 15/04/2016
Pages 260
Version paperback
Readership level Professional and scholarly
Language English
ISBN 9781138922112
Categories Urban communities
$72.75 (with VAT)
323.40 PLN / €69.34 / £60.19
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Book description

Software has become essential to the functioning of cities. It is deeply embedded into the systems and infrastructure of the built environment and is entrenched in the management and governance of urban societies. Software-enabled technologies and services enhance the ways in which we understand and plan cities. It even has an effect on how we manage urban services and utilities.





Code and the City explores the extent and depth of the ways in which software mediates how people work, consume, communication, travel and play. The reach of these systems is set to become even more pervasive through efforts to create smart cities: cities that employ ICTs to underpin and drive their economy and governance. Yet, despite the roll-out of software-enabled systems across all aspects of city life, the relationship between code and the city has barely been explored from a critical social science perspective. This collection of essays seeks to fill that gap, and offers an interdisciplinary examination of the relationship between software and contemporary urbanism.





This book will be of interest to those researching or studying smart cities and urban infrastructure.

Code and the City

Table of contents

1. Code and the City (Rob Kitchin and Sung-Yueh Perng) Part One: Code, coding, cities 2. From a line of code to an assemblage to the entire city (Rob Kitchin) 3. Code-crowd: How software repositories express urban life (Adrian Mackenzie) 4. Encountering the city at hackathons (Sophia Maalsen and Sung-Yueh Perng) 5. Abstract urbanism (Matthew Fuller and Graham Harwood) 6. Interfacing urban intelligence (Shannon Mattern) Part Two: Code, locative/social media, mobility 7. Moving applications: A multilayered approach to mobile computing (Jim Merricks) 8. Digital social interactions in the city: Reflecting on location-based social media (Luigina Ciolfi, and Gabriela Avram) 9. Feeling place in the city: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media (Leighton Evans) 10. Cultural curation and urban Interfaces: Locative media as experimental platforms for cultural data (Nanna Verhoeff) 11. Digital urbanism in crises: A hopeful monster? (Monika Buscher, Michael Liegl and Katrina Petersen) Part Three: Cities, knowledge, governance 12. Cities and context: The codification of small areas through geodemographic classification (Alex Singleton) 13. The city and the Feudal Internet: Examining institutional materialities Paul Dourish) 14. Semantic cities: Coded geopolitics and rise of the semantic web (Heather Ford and Mark Graham) 15. Coding alternative modes of governance: Learning from experimental "peer to peer cities" (Alison Powell) 16. Big data and stratification urban futures (Agnieszka Leszczynski) 17. The Cryptographic city (David M. Berry)

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