Inhabiting digital spaces: An informational right to the city for mobility justice

被引:0
|
作者
Nostikasari, Dian [1 ,3 ]
Foster, Nicole [2 ]
Krake, Lauren [1 ]
机构
[1] Drake Univ, Des Moines, IA USA
[2] Northland Coll, Ashland, WI USA
[3] Drake Univ, Environm Sci & Sustainabil, 2507 Univ Ave, Des Moines, IA 50311 USA
关键词
right to the city; mobility; epistemology; conceptual spaces; lived spaces; informational right; BLACK-BOXES; TRANSPORT; KNOWLEDGE; POLITICS; MODELS; POLICY; TRAVEL;
D O I
10.1177/00420980241244512
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Space is often produced digitally before it is produced physically. This article investigates how the right to the city can be broadened to include the appropriation of digital spaces to produce 'lived' transportation spaces. Focussing on mobilisation against highway expansion in Dallas, Texas, we ask the following: (1) what are the mechanisms through which space is conceived, perceived, and lived through the lens of mobility justice; (2) how might claims for technical information challenge dominant transportation policies and projects; and (3) how might participants inhabit digital spaces? We conduct a qualitative analysis of transportation planning narratives, visualisations, and public comments in three documents: the Dallas City Center Master Assessment Process, Coalition for a New Dallas' I-345/45 Framework Plan, and public survey data regarding proposed highway changes (n = 1241). Findings demonstrate how residents challenge transportation 'needs' as often determined in conceptual planning spaces. Further, technologies can be appropriated to produce differential spaces, which can alter the trajectory of highway projects. Challenging the legitimacy of institutionalised knowledge through the appropriation and production of digital spaces forms part of a larger claim to the right of the city.
引用
收藏
页码:2585 / 2602
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The right to the city: Social justice and the right to the city.
    Reynolds, DR
    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, 2004, 80 (04) : 407 - 408
  • [2] THE RIGHT TO THE CITY IN THE PARADIGM OF MOBILITY
    Yarskaya-Smirnova, Valentina N.
    Yarskaia-Smirnova, Elena R.
    VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA-FILOSOFIYA-SOTSIOLOGIYA-POLITOLOGIYA-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY SOCIOLOGY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2018, 45 : 165 - 173
  • [3] Digital (in)justice in the smart city
    Mackinnon, Debra
    CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIES-GEOGRAPHIES CANADIENNES, 2024, 68 (01): : e9 - e10
  • [4] Digital (In)justice in the Smart City
    Hadfield, Ed
    INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2024, 27 (05) : 1044 - 1046
  • [5] Digital (in)justice in the smart city
    Dunaway, W. Michael
    Mackinnon, Debra
    Burns, Ryan
    Fast, Victoria
    JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, 2024,
  • [6] Public Spaces, Private Spaces, and the Right to the City
    Moroni, Stefano
    Chiodelli, Francesco
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF E-PLANNING RESEARCH, 2014, 3 (01) : 51 - 65
  • [7] Libraries in digital and physical spaces of informational world cities
    Mainka, Agnes
    Orszullok, Lisa
    Stallmann, Anika
    INFORMATION-WISSENSCHAFT UND PRAXIS, 2012, 63 (04): : 241 - 251
  • [8] The right to the city: Social justice and the right to public space
    Zeitlin, M
    SCIENCE & SOCIETY, 2004, 68 (04) : 515 - 517
  • [9] Right to the city and urban mobility: the bicycle in the car city
    Monteiro, Felipe Violi
    dos Santos, Leticia
    de Oliveira Paulo, Carla Fernanda
    REVISTA DE GESTAO E SECRETARIADO-GESEC, 2023, 14 (02): : 2302 - 2321
  • [10] An Informational Right to the City? Code, Content, Control, and the Urbanization of Information
    Shaw, Joe
    Graham, Mark
    ANTIPODE, 2017, 49 (04) : 907 - 927