Smart cities como hacker cities. Urbanismo organicista y la reestructuración del bienestar en la Italia de la crisis

Contenido principal del artículo

Andrea Pollio

Resumen

Este artículo está relacionado con la racionalidad discursiva de la “ciudad inteligente”, en el contexto en el cual se convirtió en una poderosa narrativa de cambio urbano durante la crisis en Italia - justo después de la primera etapa de la crisis en Europa, en 2011-2012. Mientras que el concepto funciona como un significante vago que podría ser utilizado para designar cualquier cosa urbana como “inteligente”, la “smart city” también entendió a las ciudades como actores del cambio, como “hackers” que podrían aprovechar la innovación tecnológica para responder a las crisis sociales y económicas.  A partir de esta observación, dos argumentos son explorados en el artículo. En primer lugar, que las narrativas de las “ciudad inteligentes” siguen una larga tradición de urbanismo biológico que combina imaginarios tecno-utópicos con la cuestión más mundana de abordar las crisis económicas. En segundo lugar, que la representación de las ciudades como máquinas de crecimiento orgánico fue, al menos discursivamente, un experimento para repensar el estado de bienestar de una era de austeridad.


 

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Pollio, A. (2022). Smart cities como hacker cities. Urbanismo organicista y la reestructuración del bienestar en la Italia de la crisis . Nóesis. Revista De Ciencias Sociales Y Humanidades, 25(49-1), 31–44. https://doi.org/10.20983/noesis.2016.12.3
Sección
Ciencias Sociales
Biografía del autor/a

Andrea Pollio, Politecnico di Torino

Professor

Citas

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