Solutions and frictions in civic hacking: collaboratively designing and building wait time predictions for an immigration office

Sung Yueh Perng*, Rob Kitchin

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: Article同行評審

22 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Smart and data-driven technologies seek to create urban environments and systems that can operate efficiently and effortlessly. Yet, the design and implementation of such technical solutions are full of frictions, producing unanticipated consequences and generating turbulence that foreclose the creation of friction-free city solutions. In this paper, we examine the development of solutions for wait time predictions in the context of civic hacking to argue that a focus on frictions is important for establishing a critical understanding of innovation for urban everyday life. The empirical study adopted an ethnographically informed mobile methods approach to follow how frictions emerge and linger in the design and production of queue predictions developed through the civic hacking initiative, Code for Ireland. In so doing, the paper charts how solutions have to be worked up and strategies re-negotiated when a shared motivation meets different data sources, technical expertise, frames of understanding, urban imaginaries and organisational practices; and how solutions are contingently stabilised in technological, motivational, spatiotemporal and organisational specificities rather than unfolding in a smooth, linear, progressive trajectory.

貢獻的翻譯標題Solutions and frictions in civic hacking: collaboratively designing and building wait time predictions for an immigration office
原文English
頁(從 - 到)1-20
頁數20
期刊Social and Cultural Geography
19
發行號1
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 2 1月 2018

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