Description

Book Synopsis
Jennifer Clark reframes the smart city concept within the trajectory of uneven development of cities and regions, as well as the long history of technocratic solutions to urban policy challenges. She considers the potential of emerging technologies as well as their capacity to exacerbate existing inequalities and even produce new ones.

Trade Review
Written by one of the world’s foremost experts, Uneven Innovation is a must-have book for everyone interested in the potential and the pitfalls of the smart cities narrative. It provides both a critical review of the main debates surrounding smart cities and thought-provoking insights into future research and policy agendas. -- Ben Derudder, Ghent University
Uneven Innovation is a superb, original, and informative intervention into ongoing debates about what a smart city is and its implications across all cities. Grounded in significant original and secondary research, Clark links smart cities to urban innovation and the production of markets, crucially arguing that the smart city is an economic rather than technological issue. -- Robyn Dowling, University of Sydney
Uneven Innovation problematizes the smart city project, showing us the many ways that it continues—rather than disrupts—underlying patterns of inequality, precariousness, and powerlessness. Clark’s insightful critique is not only a call for action, her work draws to light the 'operational standards' that all cities should be pushed to uphold when engaging the latest urban development fad. An essential read for practitioners, activists, and scholars seeking to understand and shape the role of technology on the future of cities and the urban workforce. -- Nichola Lowe, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
In Uneven Innovation, Jennifer Clark takes on the cult of urban innovation, cutting through the buzz and exposing the false promises of the smart city machine. It’s a searching, critical account that opens horizons beyond the smart city limits, while also delving into the belly of the beast. A timely and necessary intervention. -- Jamie Peck, University of British Columbia
Uneven Innovation provides a new framework for understanding the emergence of the smart city project. It is a geographically and historically nuanced approach to the current focus on smart cities. Clark leaves the reader in no doubt that technology is as likely to deepen as to address existing spatial inequalities. -- Kevin Ward, University of Manchester
Jennifer Clark's enlightening book challenges the premise that smart cities are radically disruptive. With an economic geographer's critical eye, she shows how the smart cities project follows established patterns of corporations beggaring the public sector, converting citizens into consumers and precarious workers, and reinforcing preexisting spatial inequalities. Yet Uneven Innovation is not a screed; it is well-reasoned, empirically-rich analysis of the interface between tech companies, new platforms and infrastructures, and urban governance that should be the starting point for all discussions of this fast-growing phenomenon. -- Rachel Weber, University of Illinois at Chicago
In Uneven Innovation, Jennifer Clark delves deep into the contemporary Smart Cities discourse. Socio-spatial and economic dynamics that are inherent to processes of technological change and ensuing (local) uneven economic development opportunities are diligently exposed via expert insights into the Urban Innovation Project. It’s an agenda setting account of extraordinary relevance. -- Dieter Kogler, University College Dublin
For anyone interested in the role of technology and the tech industry in shaping modern cities, Uneven Innovation is a must read. Jennifer Clark's analysis cuts through the hype around smart cities, and provides a refreshing critical perspective, highlighting both the benefits of emerging technologies and the ways they have been used to exacerbate urban inequalities. -- Chris Benner, Dorothy E. Everett Chair in Global Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship, University of California Santa Cruz
Jennifer Clark’s compelling book Uneven Innovation places these claims in context and examines them with the discerning eye of an economic geographer. * Journal of Urban Affairs *
In the end, the book’s greatest strength will be its sustained relevance. Though published in early 2020 and presumably finalized in late 2019, the book does not immediately need a Covid-era update. Its main tenets resonated before the pandemic and will continue to act as a warning for cities as they begin to re-engage with the challenges of the smart-cities project in the post-Covid era. * Metropolitics *
Stands out for its insightful and critical analysis from a political economy perspective...should be required reading in the urban informatics graduate programs popping up all over the country. Further, it should be among the readings in graduate courses in urban economic development, economic geography, and urban data analytics. * Journal of the American Planning Association *
It has both theoretical and practical implications, and is important reading for anyone performing research on this issue, or for those working on the implementation of smart city activities. * Regional Studies *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
1. Uneven Innovation: The Evolution of the Urban Technology Project
2. Smart Cities as Solutions
3. Smart Cities as Emerging Markets
4. Smart Cities as the New Urban Entrepreneurship
5. Smart Cities as Urban Innovation Networks
6. Smart Cities as Participatory Planning
7. Smart Cities as the New Uneven Development
8. Conclusions: The Local Is (Not) the Enemy
Epilogue: The View from Inside the Urban Innovation Project
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Uneven Innovation

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A Hardback by Jennifer Clark

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    View other formats and editions of Uneven Innovation by Jennifer Clark

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 25/02/2020
    ISBN13: 9780231184960, 978-0231184960
    ISBN10: 0231184964

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Jennifer Clark reframes the smart city concept within the trajectory of uneven development of cities and regions, as well as the long history of technocratic solutions to urban policy challenges. She considers the potential of emerging technologies as well as their capacity to exacerbate existing inequalities and even produce new ones.

    Trade Review
    Written by one of the world’s foremost experts, Uneven Innovation is a must-have book for everyone interested in the potential and the pitfalls of the smart cities narrative. It provides both a critical review of the main debates surrounding smart cities and thought-provoking insights into future research and policy agendas. -- Ben Derudder, Ghent University
    Uneven Innovation is a superb, original, and informative intervention into ongoing debates about what a smart city is and its implications across all cities. Grounded in significant original and secondary research, Clark links smart cities to urban innovation and the production of markets, crucially arguing that the smart city is an economic rather than technological issue. -- Robyn Dowling, University of Sydney
    Uneven Innovation problematizes the smart city project, showing us the many ways that it continues—rather than disrupts—underlying patterns of inequality, precariousness, and powerlessness. Clark’s insightful critique is not only a call for action, her work draws to light the 'operational standards' that all cities should be pushed to uphold when engaging the latest urban development fad. An essential read for practitioners, activists, and scholars seeking to understand and shape the role of technology on the future of cities and the urban workforce. -- Nichola Lowe, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
    In Uneven Innovation, Jennifer Clark takes on the cult of urban innovation, cutting through the buzz and exposing the false promises of the smart city machine. It’s a searching, critical account that opens horizons beyond the smart city limits, while also delving into the belly of the beast. A timely and necessary intervention. -- Jamie Peck, University of British Columbia
    Uneven Innovation provides a new framework for understanding the emergence of the smart city project. It is a geographically and historically nuanced approach to the current focus on smart cities. Clark leaves the reader in no doubt that technology is as likely to deepen as to address existing spatial inequalities. -- Kevin Ward, University of Manchester
    Jennifer Clark's enlightening book challenges the premise that smart cities are radically disruptive. With an economic geographer's critical eye, she shows how the smart cities project follows established patterns of corporations beggaring the public sector, converting citizens into consumers and precarious workers, and reinforcing preexisting spatial inequalities. Yet Uneven Innovation is not a screed; it is well-reasoned, empirically-rich analysis of the interface between tech companies, new platforms and infrastructures, and urban governance that should be the starting point for all discussions of this fast-growing phenomenon. -- Rachel Weber, University of Illinois at Chicago
    In Uneven Innovation, Jennifer Clark delves deep into the contemporary Smart Cities discourse. Socio-spatial and economic dynamics that are inherent to processes of technological change and ensuing (local) uneven economic development opportunities are diligently exposed via expert insights into the Urban Innovation Project. It’s an agenda setting account of extraordinary relevance. -- Dieter Kogler, University College Dublin
    For anyone interested in the role of technology and the tech industry in shaping modern cities, Uneven Innovation is a must read. Jennifer Clark's analysis cuts through the hype around smart cities, and provides a refreshing critical perspective, highlighting both the benefits of emerging technologies and the ways they have been used to exacerbate urban inequalities. -- Chris Benner, Dorothy E. Everett Chair in Global Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship, University of California Santa Cruz
    Jennifer Clark’s compelling book Uneven Innovation places these claims in context and examines them with the discerning eye of an economic geographer. * Journal of Urban Affairs *
    In the end, the book’s greatest strength will be its sustained relevance. Though published in early 2020 and presumably finalized in late 2019, the book does not immediately need a Covid-era update. Its main tenets resonated before the pandemic and will continue to act as a warning for cities as they begin to re-engage with the challenges of the smart-cities project in the post-Covid era. * Metropolitics *
    Stands out for its insightful and critical analysis from a political economy perspective...should be required reading in the urban informatics graduate programs popping up all over the country. Further, it should be among the readings in graduate courses in urban economic development, economic geography, and urban data analytics. * Journal of the American Planning Association *
    It has both theoretical and practical implications, and is important reading for anyone performing research on this issue, or for those working on the implementation of smart city activities. * Regional Studies *

    Table of Contents
    List of Illustrations
    Preface
    1. Uneven Innovation: The Evolution of the Urban Technology Project
    2. Smart Cities as Solutions
    3. Smart Cities as Emerging Markets
    4. Smart Cities as the New Urban Entrepreneurship
    5. Smart Cities as Urban Innovation Networks
    6. Smart Cities as Participatory Planning
    7. Smart Cities as the New Uneven Development
    8. Conclusions: The Local Is (Not) the Enemy
    Epilogue: The View from Inside the Urban Innovation Project
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Index

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