Smart Cities in Canada: Digital Dreams, Corporate Designs: Independent experts analyze often-controversial schemes from Nunavut to Montreal to Toronto's failed Sidewalk Labs waterfront scheme

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Mariana Valverde, Alexandra Flynn
James Lorimer & Company, Oct 13, 2020 - Political Science - 200 pages
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"Smart cities" use surveillance, big data processing and interactive technologies to reshape urban life. Transit riders can see the bus coming on a map on their phones. Cities can measure and analyze the garbage collected from every household. Businesses can track individuals' movements and precisely target advertisements.

Google's failed Sidewalk Labs proposal in Toronto, which drew sharp criticism over surveillance and privacy concerns, is just one of the many smart city projects which have been proposed or are underway in Canada. Iqaluit, Edmonton, Guelph, Montreal, Toronto and other cities and towns are all grappling with how to use these technologies. Some cities have quickly partnered with digital giants like Uber, Bell and IBM. Others have kept their distance. Big tech companies are hard at work recruiting customers and shaping – sometimes making – public policy on data collection and privacy.

Smart Cities for Canada: Promise and Perils is the first book on smart cities in Canada. In this collection, experts from across the country investigate what this new approach means for the problems cities face, and expose the larger issues about urban planning and democracy raised by smart city technology. This is a valuable, timely, independent‐minded book for Canadians.

 

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Contents

Smart Cities in Canada
7
Sidewalk Labs Googles Failed Smart City
36
Pseudo Participation in Smart City
52
Privatized Policymaking on Torontos Waterfront
68
An Activist Perspective on the Sidewalk Project
83
Smart Cities Large and Small Around Canada
102
Guelph and Wellington Countys UrbanRural
115
A Rural Municipalitys
145
Out Smarting Traffic
158
Fashion and Design in the Age of Digital Surveillance
171
Acknowledgements
185
Index
198
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About the author (2020)

Mariana Valverde is a Professor in the University of Toronto Centre for Criminology & Socioecology Studies. She has written several books about law and urban governance and is currently researching smart cities and public-private partnerships. Professor Valverde lives in Toronto.

Alexandra Flynn is an Assistant Professor at the Peter A. Allard School of Law at the University of British Columbia, specializing in municipal law and governance. Her current research project focuses on Indigenous-municipal relationships in the land use planning process, including in Nunavut. She lives in Vancouver.

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