The Global Whitewashing of Smart Cities: Citizens’ Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Research Method
3.1. Data Collection
- The interviews. Each interview took between 45 min and one hour, and field notes were used to ensure consistency and validity. All interviews were carried out in Arabic and recorded (with the participant’s consent). Each transcript was translated into English for the purpose of this report.
3.2. Sampling
- Educated to at least graduate level.
- Likely to have heard of the term ‘smart city’.
- Likely to have considered the societal and individual impact of smart cities.
- Likely to be willing to offer their views.
3.3. The Interviews
- Understanding the concept of a ‘smart city’.
- Understanding of purpose of smart cities.
- The impact of smart cities on the state/city/community.
- Their impact on you (the participant).
- The future: what will smart cities bring to society?
3.4. Study Ethics
3.5. Data Analysis
- Initial coding. The transcriptions of each interview were read several times, and segment-by-segment coding was carried out to identify similarities in content.
- Search for themes. Groups of focused codes that had a commonality of meaning were identified. These were recorded as ‘sub-themes’. These were then also analysed for commonalities to form ‘main themes’.
4. Results
4.1. Human Belief in Technology
I think, in general terms, that smart cities sound good at one level, offering more efficient governing and better quality of life for people. But I worry that it’s too often technology for the sake of it, rather than the result of a coherent long-term strategy, and that can end up being counterproductive.
It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking that any technology that’s good for one is good for all. But that’s not necessarily the case. In fact, I’d say it’s rarely the case. Often, technical solutions are promoted as being in everyone’s interests when, really, they only serve the interests of a few.
The problem is, that concepts like smart cities are usually just imposed on people. It’s taken for granted by the authorities that the general population will welcome whatever technologies and solutions are used. You really see rarely see consultative processes being used at design level.
4.2. Prioritising Profit over Social Improvement
We’re often told that smart cities will improve aspects of our daily lives, such as better healthcare and public services, but I can’t help thinking that the main reason behind them is to collect data and sell it to local businesses.
I like the idea of using technology to improve public services and promote equality, but I can’t help thinking that this is just a front for more self-serving aims. I can’t prove it, of course, but I suspect the ultimate objective of a [smart city] is profit-driven—using social improvement as way of making money.
Personally, I suspect that much of the thinking behind smart cities is driven by government and corporate interests who are using it to consolidate power and create new market opportunities. I think that’s a realistic view, rather than cynical. After all, public services are known to be a way for corporations to enhance profit, and most countries operate on the basis of looking after a small wealthy elite, rather than pursuing the greater good. I think it’s a little naïve to expect things to be different with smart city policy.
It all sounds good, I admit, but is it just marketing hype? I don’t know, but it feels like one of those empty labels that hide a manipulative purpose, such as gaining more control or protecting elitist interests. Ordinary citizens don’t have much of a say in how these things work.
4.3. Urban Surveillance
When you hear talk of smart cities, it is usually in terms of how much they will improve things, you know, like a greener environment, safer streets and better public services. But I can’t help worrying that the technologies involved, like CCTV and data collection, will lead to greater state control and less individual freedom.
In some ways, you could be forgiven for thinking that the word ‘smart’ is just another word for ‘surveillance’, as just about everything that makes a smart city work is about collecting and using data on citizens.
I heard someone say that today’s smart technology could transform law enforcement, and give us all a safer environment. Well, maybe, but as far as I can see, it leads to more problems than it solves. If that’s what we get with smart cities, then some re-thinking has to be done, in my view.
I can see the problems with using surveillance technology everywhere, but there are also some clear advantages, too. Everything in life is about the risk–reward equation, and the price of greater control might be worth paying for reducing crime and getting a greater sense of security. I’m not sure. But it’s probably going to happen, whatever the individual might think about it.
4.4. Privacy and Data Security
As I understand it, smart cities by their nature involve the collection of huge amounts of data produced by me or any devices I own. I find that very worrying. If it falls into the wrong hands, it could be used for many criminal purposes, such as robbing my home while I’m away, as I travel quite a lot. The havoc that this kind of abuse could cause is unthinkable.
Even without smart cities, data breaches are becoming ever more common as criminals get more sophisticated. The use of even more digital technology and data collection in a smart environment could cause citizens to lose trust in the government’s ability to protect their data.
Even if authorities prioritise data security in their systems, there is always the risk of mismanagement, or accidental leakage. Personally, I think the best way forward is not to collect data on individuals, but on collective activity, so there wouldn’t be a privacy risk to citizens. I’m not completely sure, but I believe some smart cities operate on that principle.
I love the fact that my home is reasonably smart, which makes it easy to do things like regulate the temperature in the summer, and help make the place more secure. I’m not so keen on the idea that these devices could be constantly monitored, in order to collect data—I would worry about how that data could be used.
4.5. Dehumanisation
Whenever they’re talked about, smart cities always seem to be described with a lot of fine words, about how they allow people to interact with their environment, but the effect of digital technology, as far as I can see, is to isolate people, rather than bring them together—to cut them off from their environment, by reducing the need for physical interaction. In the long term that can only end up with people being less, rather than more, human.
We’re already seeing the early signs of how technology can cause division and inequality, by cutting people off from certain services if they don’t have the right technological resources. Social media makes things worse, by discouraging people from engaging with the real world. All this could become a hundred times worse in a smart city, where everything is about using technology—far from being liberated, people will become trapped in a digital prison.
The dehumanising power of technology is clear from many present-day examples, and it’s hard to see how that power will be contained and controlled in a living environment which is totally built around digital processes. My worry is that the smart city idea, while offering some short-term benefits, will ultimately produce cities which are more like machines, with people treated as the cogs that make it work.
You only need to look at the controversy and concerns surrounding AI at the moment to imagine where we could be in a couple of decades’ time. The use of AI and deep-fake technology to spread misinformation and cause disruption is already threatening not just individual lives but social structures, and it seems to be getting out of control. Yet these technologies will be the basis of smart cities. I find it very concerning.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Participants | |
---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 33 |
Female | 27 | |
Category | Academic | 12 |
Business | 12 | |
Government | 6 | |
Activist | 10 | |
Civil Soc | 10 | |
Age | 18–35 | 25 |
35+ | 35 |
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Mutambik, I. The Global Whitewashing of Smart Cities: Citizens’ Perspectives. Sustainability 2023, 15, 8100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108100
Mutambik I. The Global Whitewashing of Smart Cities: Citizens’ Perspectives. Sustainability. 2023; 15(10):8100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108100
Chicago/Turabian StyleMutambik, Ibrahim. 2023. "The Global Whitewashing of Smart Cities: Citizens’ Perspectives" Sustainability 15, no. 10: 8100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108100
APA StyleMutambik, I. (2023). The Global Whitewashing of Smart Cities: Citizens’ Perspectives. Sustainability, 15(10), 8100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108100