设计智慧城市?对公民参与设计思维的质疑

Gabriele Schliwa
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引用次数: 5

摘要

在城市冲突日益加剧的背景下,公民参与城市治理已成为一种典范,有望实现更大的民主、赋权和更具成本效益的公共服务提供。然而,在智慧城市和城市创新的背景下,对“公民”甚至“智慧公民”的主要关注是一个相对较新的现象。越来越多的倡议寻求将智慧城市改造为人性化的智慧城市。其中,设计思维和以人为本的设计已经成为描述“以人为本”的方法的流行语,这些方法承诺开发适合公民需求的解决方案。在信息和通信技术(ICT)产品和服务开发的背景下,以前被称为以用户为中心的设计,现在通过创新实验室或公民黑客马拉松在城市中扩散。但是,在智慧城市的背景下使用设计思维意味着什么呢?此外,如何在城市学术中解开以人为本的设计和设计思维?本章将城市中的设计思维现象置于语境中,使隐性的设计思维过程更加清晰。根据2014年以来在曼彻斯特和阿姆斯特丹正在进行的研究,我正在进行的工作表明,通过设计思维进行治理的结果是对社会的设计,而不是对社会的设计。这一趋势需要有历史依据的政治分析和其他治理方式,如果“智慧城市的权利”不成为改变形态的新自由主义战略的又一次迭代。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Smart Cities by Design? Interrogating Design Thinking for Citizen Participation
Citizen participation in urban governance has established itself as a paradigm, promising greater democracy, empowerment, and more cost-effective public service delivery against the backdrop of increased urban conflicts. The dominant focus on the “citizen” or even “smart citizen” in the context of smart cities and urban innovation is however a relatively recent phenomenon. A growing number of initiatives seek to revamp the smart city as a human smart city. Therein, design thinking and human-centered design have become the buzzwords of choice to describe “putting people first” approaches that promise to develop solutions tailored to citizens’ needs. What was previously known as user-centered design in the context of information and communication technology (ICT) product and service development now proliferates the urban through innovation labs or civic hackathons. But what are the implications of using design thinking in a smart city context? And moreover, how to unpack human-centered design and design thinking within urban scholarship? This chapter contextualizes the phenomenon of design thinking in cities and renders implicit design thinking processes more explicit. Drawing upon ongoing research in Manchester and Amsterdam since 2014, my work-in-progress suggests that governing through design thinking results in a designing of the social rather than for the social. This trend requires historically informed political analysis and alternative ways to govern if the “right to the smart city” is not to become yet another iteration of shape-shifting neoliberal strategies.
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