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On data cultures and the prehistories of smart urbanism in “Africa’s Digital City

Article image

Jonathan Cinnamon

29 April 2022

Taylor and Francis Online

English

uKESA Librarian 2

Journal article

Africa

Data is variably imagined and practiced according to values, behaviours, and norms fashioned over an extended temporal register, meaning data initiatives are not only influenced by contemporary technological and structural conditions but also by the forces of history and culture. This claim is advanced by situating Cape Town’s smart city plans in a national historical context, highlighting how desires to be a “global city” driven by data, evidence, and openness come up against a data culture largely incompatible with these goals. A genealogy of South Africa’s politicised history of recordkeeping, biometrics, databases, and information sharing reveals the roots and legacy of an ambivalent data culture, which poses a considerable challenge to today’s data ambitions.

 

Through this example, the paper makes two contributions to the critical understanding of urban data. First, it advances the notion of data cultures – the values, behaviours, and norms ascribed to data by groups or organisations that together shape practices of data collection, management, use, and sharing. Second, it draws attention to the multi-scalar production of smart cities, when global data imaginaries meet national-scale characteristics at local places. These findings present a new lens for understanding the relative success or failure of (urban) data initiatives.

 

Abstract based directly on source.

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Africa

Built environment

Capacity building

Cape Town

Cities and towns

City planning

Construction

Data analysis

Data quality

Governance

ICT

Information need

Policy

Smart Cities

South Africa

Sustainability

Technology and innovation

Urban

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