Smart City Gnosys

Smart city article details

Title A Smarter Toronto: Some Reassembly Required
ID_Doc 4810
Authors Hanke B.
Year 2024
Published A Smarter Toronto: Some Reassembly Required
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-41546-3
Abstract This book bridges media, technocultural, urban, and journalism studies to examine the role of journalism in relation to a smart city project on Toronto's waterfront. From the announcement of the public-private partnership called Sidewalk Toronto to the project's termination, a mediatized controversy unfolded. Through an assemblage approach to this project and a case study of The Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star, it follows the actors and chronicles the Quayside project story as a conversation about the promise and perils of a future "smart" neighbourhood. In the news of Waterfront Toronto, Sidewalk Labs, other actors, events, and developments, there were multiple voices and views, interpretations and arguments, that manifested conflicting interests and values. As a locally situated actor, journalism produced a porous discourse that expressed a propose-and-public pushback movement. This work of articulating mediation conditioned the project's alteration and dissolution within asymmetrical relations of power. In addition to a wave of opposition that inflected the project's enactment, a time lag between project time and governmental policymaking made the controversy over this future urban space intractable. With their residual symbolic power, quality journalism contributed to dialogical urban learning. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024. All rights reserved.
Author Keywords Assemblage theory; Dialogical urban learning; Journalism discourse; Mediatized controversy; Sidewalk Toronto; Smart city


Similar Articles


Id Similarity Authors Title Published
4808 View0.951Hanke B.A Smarter Neighbourhood? A Postscript On Sidewalk TorontoInternational Communication Gazette, 87, 1 (2025)
48740 View0.856Olmstead N.A.Sidewalk Toronto And The Discursive Politics Of The Real-Time CityTime and Society (2025)