SMART CITIES AND ACCESSIBILITY: THE NEED TO OVERCOME NEW FORMS OF DISCRIMINATION

Authors

  • Magdalena Suárez Ojeda Spain

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24310/wps.vi3.13787

Keywords:

Smart-city, Technological revolution, Control, Disabilities, Integration

Abstract

The Smart City concept has gained impulse in recent years. It is inevitable that the technological revolution that broke into the lives of citizens in the last decades of the last century was translated into urban space at some point. Thus it has been, the new century begins to integrate the new technologies in the control of the city that entails deep structural changes as far as the relationship between individuals and public political powers is concerned. The possibility of interacting with services and being active agents of the proper functioning of public powers has opened the doors to a new scenario of public-private dialogue. But the cities had not solved, much less all their problems previously, the high concentration of the population in the cities, the depopulation of the countryside, the slums, pollution, traffic and CO2 emissions, etc.
Among these problems, it is worth highlighting the difficulties that people with disabilities have to integrate into certain urban spaces. This problem can be amplified by the introduction of new technologies that directly expel a part of the population from the march of the world and from access to products, goods and services.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Moroni, C.P. “Barreras urbanísticas” en “Discapacidad visual hoy aportes sobre la visión diferenciada” http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/averroes/caidv/interedvisual/dvh_12/dvh_12_6.pdf

Informe mundial sobre la discapacidad 2011. Organización Mundial de la Salud y Banco Mundial (http://www.who.int/disabilities/world_report/2011/summary_es.pdf)

Suárez, M. (2009) “La accesibilidad en la edificación: reflexión general y nuevas perspectivas” Revista Aranzadi de Urbanismo y Edificación no 18: 43-52.

Thite, M. (2011) “Smart cities: implications of urban planning for human resource Human Resource” Development International Vol. 14, No. 5, November 2011: 623–631

Thuzar, Moe (2011/2012) “Urbanization in south Asia: developing smart cities for the future? Regional Outlook 2011/2012 Southeas: 96-100.

Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network (AURIN) (20149 to release new data analysis tools for smart cities. CIO (13284045)) “Residential segregation among social and ethnic groups in Budapest during the post- communist transition”, in P Marcuse, R van Kempen (eds) Of States and Cities: The Partitioning of Urban Space .Oxford University Press, Oxford: 170-182.

Published

2016-06-01

How to Cite

Suárez Ojeda, M. (2016). SMART CITIES AND ACCESSIBILITY: THE NEED TO OVERCOME NEW FORMS OF DISCRIMINATION. WPS Review International on Sustainable Housing and Urban Renewal, (3), 81–87. https://doi.org/10.24310/wps.vi3.13787

Issue

Section

Propuestas de Actuación