Digital cities 9 workshop - hackable cities: From Subversive City Making to Systemic Change

Publication date

2015

Authors

de Lange, M.L.ORCID 0000-0003-3871-2655ISNI 0000000419394759
Verhoeff, NannaISNI 0000000043807526
Waal, Martijn de
Foth, Marcus
Brynskov, Martin

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

The DC9 workshop takes place on June 27, 2015 in Limerick, Ireland and is titled "Hackable Cities: From Subversive City Making to Systemic Change". The notion of "hacking" originates from the world of media technologies but is increasingly often being used for creative ideals and practices of city making. "City hacking" evokes more participatory, inclusive, decentralized, playful and subversive alternatives to often top-down ICT implementations in smart city making. However, these discourses about "hacking the city" are used ambiguously and are loaded with various ideological presumptions, which makes the term also problematic. For some "urban hacking" is about empowering citizens to organize around communal issues and perform aesthetic urban interventions. For others it raises questions about governance: what kind of "city hacks" should be encouraged or not, and who decides? Can city hacking be curated? For yet others, trendy participatory buzzwords like these are masquerades for deeply libertarian neoliberal values. Furthermore, a question is how "city hacking" may mature from the tactical level of smart and often playful interventions to the strategic level of enduring impact. The Digital Cities 9 workshop welcomes papers that explore the idea of "hackable city making" in constructive and critical ways.

Keywords

hackability, smart city, city making, urban curation, Taverne, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities

Citation

Lange, M D, Verhoeff, N, Waal, M D, Foth, M & Brynskov, M 2015, Digital cities 9 workshop - hackable cities : From Subversive City Making to Systemic Change. in C &T '15: Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Communities and Technologies. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 165-167. https://doi.org/10.1145/2768545.2768564