The soft boundaries of the smart city in the push to urbanise technology

Journal title SOCIOLOGIA URBANA E RURALE
Author/s Piergiorgio Degli Esposti
Publishing Year 2019 Issue 2019/118 Language Italian
Pages 17 P. 161-177 File size 374 KB
DOI 10.3280/SUR2019-118012
DOI is like a bar code for intellectual property: to have more infomation click here

Below, you can see the article first page

If you want to buy this article in PDF format, you can do it, following the instructions to buy download credits

Article preview

FrancoAngeli is member of Publishers International Linking Association, Inc (PILA), a not-for-profit association which run the CrossRef service enabling links to and from online scholarly content.

The objective of this contribution is to define and analyze the smart city concept, in light of the technological evolutions that contemporary cities gradually incorporate and according to the main theoretical contributions in the sociological field. The impact of digital technologies is progressively transforming our interactions in several contexts, not least the city as a place of production and consumption. We live more and more hybrid, physical and digital context in which paths of meaning are derived from the coexistence of the two spaces. Today’s reality is enriched with opportunities offered by the digital world (and vice versa) in the directions of the so called augmented reality and the brick and click.

Keywords: Smart city, digital society, brick and click, augmented reality, prosumer, ICT

  1. Akrich M. (1992). The De-scription of technical objects. In Bijker W.E., Law J. (eds.). Shaping technology/building society. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  2. Ash J., Kitchin R., Leszczynski A. (2018). Digital Geographies. London: SAGE.
  3. Bauman Z. (2000). Liquid Modernity. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  4. Bauman Z. (2005). Liquid Life. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  5. Bauman Z., Lyon D. (2014). Sesto potere. Bari-Roma: Laterza.
  6. Beck U. (2000). La società del rischio. Verso una seconda modernità. Roma: Carocci.
  7. Beer D., Burrows R. (2010). Consumption, prosumption and participatory web cultures. Journal of Consumer Culture, 10: 3-12. DOI: 10.2277/1469540509354009
  8. Bergamaschi M., Castrignanò M. (2017). La fine dei territori? Lo spazio urbano nella società globale. In Stefanelli M.A. (a cura di). Dopo la globalizzazione: sfide alla società e al diritto. Torino: Giappichelli.
  9. Bria F., Morozov E. (2018). Ripensare la smart city. Torino: Codice.
  10. Castells M. (2004). La città delle reti. Venezia: Marsilio Editori.
  11. Castells M. (2013). Galassia Internet. Milano: Feltrinelli.
  12. Castells M. (2014). La nascita della società in rete. Milano: UBE.
  13. Castrignanò M. (2004). La città degli individui. Milano: FrancoAngeli.
  14. Cohen B. (2016). The Emergence of the Urban Entrepreneur: How the Growth of Cities and the Sharing Economy Are Driving a New Breed of Innovators. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO.
  15. Degli Esposti P. (2015). Essere prosumer nella società digitale. Milano: FrancoAngeli.
  16. Elwood S., Leszczynski A. (2013). New Spatial Media, New Knowledge Politics. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38: (4): 544-559.
  17. Giffinger R., Fertner C., Kramar H., Kalasek R., Pichler-Milanovic N., Meijers E. (2007). Smart cities- ranking of European medium-sized cities, Vienna: University of Technology.
  18. Goldsmith S. (2014). The Responsive City. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  19. Howard E. (2017). La Città Giardino del domani. MilanoASTERIOS.
  20. Jenkins H. (2006). Convergence Culture. New York: NYU Press.
  21. Jurgenson N. (2012). When Atoms Meet Bits: Social Media, the Mobile Web, and Augmented Revolution. Future Internet, 4: 83–91.
  22. Latour B. (1992). Where are the missing masses? The sociology of a few mundane artifacts. In Bijker W.E., Law J. (eds.). Shaping technology/building society: Studies in sociotechnical change. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  23. Le Corbusier (2013). The City of tomorrow and its planning. North Chelmsford: Courier Corporation.
  24. Lee R., Wellman B. (2012). Networked. Milano: Guerini & Associati.
  25. Lévy P. (2002). L’intelligenza collettiva. Milano: Feltrinelli.
  26. Lupton D. (2015). Digital Sociology. London: Routledge.
  27. Manville C. (2014). Mapping Smart Cities in the EU. Brussels: European Parliament.
  28. Martinotti G. (1993). Metropoli. La nuova morfologia sociale della città. Bologna: il Mulino.
  29. Masi E. (2016). Impatto pedagogico e sociale dei grandi eventi.-- http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/7504/.
  30. Mazzette A., Sgroi M. (2007). La metropoli consumata. Milano: FrancoAngeli.
  31. Meijer A., Bolívar M.P.R. (2013). Governing the smart city: scaling-up the search for socio- techno synergy. Paper presented at the EGPA, Edinburgh.
  32. Ojo A., Curry E., Janowski T. (2015). Designing next generation smart city initiatives - harnessing findings and lessons from a study of ten smart city programs. In Rodríguez-Bolívar M.P. (Ed.). Transforming City Governments for Successful Smart Cities, 43–67. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-03167-5_4
  33. Oudshoorn N., Pinch, T. (2008). User-Technology relationships: some recent developments. In Hackett E.J., Amsterdamska O., Lynch M., Wajcman J. (eds.) The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies. London: The MIT Press.
  34. Pezzini I., Cervelli P. (a cura di) (2006). Scene del consumo, dallo shopping al museo. Roma: Meltemi editore.
  35. Pieretti G., Castrignanò M. (2010). Consumo di suolo e Urban Sprawl: alcune considerazioni sulla specificità del caso italiano. Sociologia Urbana e Rurale, 92-93. DOI: 10.3280/SUR2010-092005
  36. Ratti C. (2013). Smart City, Smart Citizen. Milano: EGEA.
  37. Ritzer G. (2013). Prosumption: Evolution, Revolution, or Eternal Reurn of the Same? Journal of Consumer Culture, 14 (3): 3-24. DOI: 10.1177/146540513509641.
  38. Rizer G. (2018). The McDonaldization of Society. Thousand Oaks: SAGE.
  39. Sartoretti I. (2012). Lo sprawl urbano. Micron Urbanistica, 22.
  40. Sassen S. (1991). The Global City. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  41. Sassen S. (2001). Inpacts of information technologies on urban economic and politics. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 25 (2): 411–418. DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.00319
  42. Sassen S. (2012). Urbanising Technology. Electric City. London: LSE Cities.
  43. Silverstone R., Haddon L. (1996). Design and the domestication of information and communication technologies: technical change and everyday life. In Mansell R., Silverstone R. (eds.). Communication by design: the politics of information and communication technologies. Oxsford: Oxford University Press.
  44. Staffans A., Horelli L. (2014). Expanded urban planning as a vehicle for understanding and shaping smart, liveable cities. The Journal of Community Informatics, 10, 3.
  45. Townsend A.M. (2013). Smart Cities: Big Data, civic hackers, and the quest for a new utopia. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
  46. Turkle S. (2012). Insieme ma soli. Torino: Codice.
  47. van de Wijdeven T., de Graaf L., Hendriks F. (2013). Actief Burgerschap. Lijnen in de literatuur. Amsterdam: Ios Press.

  • International Conference on Cognitive based Information Processing and Applications (CIPA 2021) Shunqiu Li, Zhong Li, pp.979 (ISBN:978-981-16-5856-3)

Piergiorgio Degli Esposti, confini ibridi della smart city nel processo di urbanizzazione della tecnologia in "SOCIOLOGIA URBANA E RURALE" 118/2019, pp 161-177, DOI: 10.3280/SUR2019-118012