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Historicizing the smart cities: Genealogy as a method of critique for smart urbanism
Affiliation:1. eGovernance Center, ITMO University, Kronverksky 49, 197101, Saint Petersburg, Russia;2. College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security, and Cybersecurity, University at Albany, 135 Western Avenue, Albany, NY, 12222, United States;1. Division of Urban and Regional Studies, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 100 44 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Geography & Centre for Climate and Energy Transformation, University of Bergen, PO Box 7802, 5020 Bergen, Norway;1. The University of Sydney, Australia;2. Monash University, Australia
Abstract:This study explores the utility of genealogy as a method of critiquing the history of the present in the smart cities. Taking a South Korean smart city of Songdo as a point of departure, this paper offers a genealogical understanding of a smart city that situates the current technics and technologies of data-driven urban governance within the broader context of South Korean history. Given the scarcity of a historically informed understanding of a smart city in the existing literatures on smart urbanism, this paper argues that a genealogical method helps us to counter the sweeping binarism that obscures the complexity and diversity of actually existing smart cities today. Through genealogy, this study underscores the multifaceted nature of the smart city, which consists of a combination of multiple urban diagrams that grows out of distinct problems and objectives of urban management – mobility, security, environment, and futurity. This paper illustrates how a smart city emerged out of multiple strings of history and problematizations that are contingently interweaved at a given time and space in multiple and diffused forms.
Keywords:Smart city  Genealogy  Diagrams  Foucault  Songdo  South Korea
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