What is it about?

The idea of smart cities is to a great extent based on the belief of planners and city managers that substantial (and instrumental) use of information and communication technologies in the management of urban functions can make cities work better. This is also part of the coordinated discourse adopted by planners, managers and politicians around the world in an attempt to position their cities in the fierce competition for revenue, jobs and people. In this paper we will concentrate on gaining an understanding of informational territories built to support surveillance and control of public spaces. We seek to question this relation by making reference to several specific uses of information and communication technologies for surveillance purposes and to discuss it from the point of view of definitions of territory. Our goal is to discuss the fact that, under the ‘mantra’ of smarter cities and on the grounds of public security, there is a scattering of micro and macro informational territorial elements that overlap to undermine the meaningfulness of urban public spaces.

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Why is it important?

This kind of study helps better understand the associations between human and non-human actor in the formation of specific sociotechnical assemblages surrounding the processes of territorialization in the contemporary city, specially those involving the use of surveillance and security technologies and practices.

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This page is a summary of: Private video monitoring of public spaces: The construction of new invisible territories, Urban Studies, January 2015, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0042098014567064.
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