[P2P-F] Fwd: Weekend Roundup: How we will inhabit the future

Michel Bauwens michel at p2pfoundation.net
Sun Jul 15 15:05:42 CEST 2018


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: The WorldPost <news at theworldpost.com>
Date: Sat, Jul 14, 2018 at 1:01 PM
Subject: Weekend Roundup: How we will inhabit the future
To: michel at p2pfoundation.net


Finding alternatives to cities that will be thirsty, drowning in waste and
controlled by a "digital brain."
Weekend Roundup: How we will inhabit the future
Finding alternatives to cities that will be thirsty, drowning in waste and
controlled by a "digital brain."

Nathan Gardels, Editor in Chief
Visit the WorldPost at http://www.theworldpost.com
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Hong Kong’s dense cityscape of buildings. (Shutterstock)
For the first time in the history of human civilization, most people live
in cities. Some mega-conglomerations like Shanghai or Delhi are the size of
countries, with populations of more than or near 20 million inhabitants.
Climate change, water, garbage, transportation flows and digital
connectivity will shape the future quality of daily life in our ever-denser
habitat. The clash between cultural globalization and the reassertion of
identity will also define a new urban character with both generic and
unique qualities.

In The WorldPost this week, we examine these dimensions of the urban
condition in the 21st century.

“Urban growth increases the demand for water, overtaxing infrastructure as
millions of people crowd into concentrated spaces with limited supplies of
fresh water,” writes Ashley Dawson
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“Some of the fastest growing cities are in areas with limited access to
fresh water. And many of these cities are located in regions particularly
susceptible to the impacts of climate change, which in many places means
higher temperatures, more heat and evaporation, and more demand for water.”
In short, as Dawson puts it, “thirsty cities.”

He illustrates the coming challenge through the prism of Cape Town, South
Africa, which faces a water crisis due to the drop in precipitation over
recent years. Through a combination of lower water pressure, higher water
taxes and public education, municipal authorities were able to cut water
consumption by 25 percent — not enough to meet the crisis. In the process,
he reports, it became clear that the rich and business interests like
Coca-Cola bottling plants used more than their fair share. A kind of “water
apartheid” was revealed. For Dawson, the answer lies in inclusive
governance of water use that rejects privatization of supplies.

“Ominously,” the Cape Town native concludes, “it is the world’s largest
cities, so-called megacities like Beijing, Delhi, Karachi, London, Los
Angeles, Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo, that are the most water
stressed. Solutions need to be oriented around the idea of water as a human
right and a common good rather than a commodity accessible only to the
rich. Only by democratizing access to scarce water supplies will we avoid a
future in which the world’s cities are reduced to incendiary wastelands.”

Reflecting on the army of ragpickers who sort through the huge garbage
dumps outside Mexico City, the philosopher Ivan Illich
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once
marveled at the “survival capacity” of those desperate souls who made a
bare living through other people’s waste. He saw them as a kind of new
class of the urban future, a “technophagic” multitude that feeds off the
waste of modern development.

Swati Singh Sambyal
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001YGvLrdTuTteboqD66D2g6j_K2CAFieYfG1GZ2DeQXYVFP8RLRyyL3mlXPkInOslBkV63ajHoRYnWnsVIfAWdjQUQ0DOjD2BVmz7ze1gtQujpz7AVz4Kj3h-xdY7gEQ4Zv5m_dd36edy6ufvpE86a7RMw16a8B0Y5Np0HvIikwOTJlk3G2EgaOX-HEylF9azrCsCtT9cIh7L13eb33Z1mEjBMDyI8_xbf1kCHIi8VEFMH_-9CWbIG-xfEhN_Wl20ym7oqOif2X5o=&c=46Lp1KE_ylmYaK78IJeOb0IVDWnpnepfcdE7dYL4MNplkNS6G_UQNQ==&ch=azXqw00fun1-QxyNZTMcsyb4UROuckdVbOFXPUAOYqX52g7fe0vJzw==>
offers
an alternative vision of the future for rapidly developing countries like
India. “India produces 62 million
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tons
of waste per year — the same amount as all of sub-Saharan Africa,” she
writes from New Delhi. “That’s nearly 170,000 tons of waste per day. It
would be apt to say that India’s cities are drowning in their own garbage.”
The way out of this dystopia, she argues, is not larger dumps, landfills or
incinerators but composting and segregation of waste where it originates.

“Muzaffarpur, a city with a population of about half a million, was
considered one of the dirtiest
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001YGvLrdTuTteboqD66D2g6j_K2CAFieYfG1GZ2DeQXYVFP8RLRyyL3mlXPkInOslBITcGGWqalwXKCbtXG8LrOrU6edjafhWwJasbpPerdcnJo3IhGxgnXLYRowfdO96maurOt1uDNX-pJ5BdjSKByV_H6MRn5FgIcO3VQDbvBgJntDI8Ucg_72_9mv4UfGp127Zu0W9DVp___4cJ48PQEJe_b-v2ZVu_yiOpJPfT1d4uzYlQ9_od24ecKTgi-H3O5u8sIy4-lDp3li7G3RrL2w==&c=46Lp1KE_ylmYaK78IJeOb0IVDWnpnepfcdE7dYL4MNplkNS6G_UQNQ==&ch=azXqw00fun1-QxyNZTMcsyb4UROuckdVbOFXPUAOYqX52g7fe0vJzw==>
in
Bihar state not long ago. Today, it’s on track to become one of the
cleanest, following a pilot program with the Center for Science and
Environment, a research and advocacy organization for which I work,” she
reports. “Starting in 2016, we began replacing centralized landfills and
dumpsites with a decentralized waste management system, in which
small-scale processing centers handle segregated waste and dry recyclables.”

For this environmental pioneer, if such practices are adapted across what
she calls the “global South,” the future envisioned by Illich can be
avoided.

Arguably the world’s most famous architect, Frank Gehry
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001YGvLrdTuTteboqD66D2g6j_K2CAFieYfG1GZ2DeQXYVFP8RLRyyL3mlXPkInOslBAMwPTX8IzLgoZ9HJDHAZZgisB9Jxdw2w5bCHgPFjLsOAOwL0xBqhRx8JuhLvb_j9AYl1gbefKBVCzYg0yRaQ26fc4CkOtPbKiOyFcLmH639AAcMScu8gvGEBDB5EZfpVg1ptAdqzsMAQCmr9LoVxBogvurkfjqq2NHdKyNzp7o7WBaZlfVowyMEXt79RYp_JO_rA_037QCk=&c=46Lp1KE_ylmYaK78IJeOb0IVDWnpnepfcdE7dYL4MNplkNS6G_UQNQ==&ch=azXqw00fun1-QxyNZTMcsyb4UROuckdVbOFXPUAOYqX52g7fe0vJzw==>,
talks in an interview and short video about how the pluralism of colliding
ideas configures the democratic space of cities and is reflected in his own
iconic buildings.

“The Disney Hall was built in a neighborhood where there are all kinds of
funny buildings,” he reflects, “and no one is paying attention to each
other. Like democracy, it’s a collision of ideas. I cherish that democracy
and the diversity it brings … When you have a unitary aesthetic, it’s
overpowering. It tells you who’s in charge and what they mean and how they
want you to live, and that’s the story.” He continues: “The collisions in a
democracy can’t deny human scale or be purposefully disruptive. They should
be collisions of thought.”

Gehry extends this view to the world: “If you’re in a world that’s
connected like we are, and we’re trying to create a world that’s
cooperative, globally cooperative, the architecture should probably express
that. That means bringing people from all kinds of cultures together, and
it creates a richness and excitement and makes life better.”
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Rem Koolhaas
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001YGvLrdTuTteboqD66D2g6j_K2CAFieYfG1GZ2DeQXYVFP8RLRyyL3mlXPkInOslBVNF9LLpEx8Cx1G-BaiLe_zrb9uw62KuztKUnUkYDaNZWqkkPHEHGnUBq1BGAGwPudTvFEWTnuvn99o3pdY51rfp7UZCbABcaNsGTRxhWmBQLV7PobNokvMO-MRJ3mJJQJ71X8PEJDs-oDzgNOIaffa3bBi_OSAn4wG-5sguiJxYhIMl0NXyXzQkCE0pttyVDDv-q0xNoGzY=&c=46Lp1KE_ylmYaK78IJeOb0IVDWnpnepfcdE7dYL4MNplkNS6G_UQNQ==&ch=azXqw00fun1-QxyNZTMcsyb4UROuckdVbOFXPUAOYqX52g7fe0vJzw==>,
the Dutch architect known as much for his writings on urban theory as for
his buildings, considers the future of cities in the context of rising
anti-globalization sentiment. “To the extent there was a global aesthetic
developing in architecture, which would have been an international style,
already in the 1980s people were critical of its inability to establish
distinct identities,” he says in an interview. “That is the reason
postmodernism emerged. It both embraced a global aesthetic yet resisted it
by mixing it with vernacular styles. That is why I said postmodernism would
be the style of the generic city. We can see that this sensibility
anticipated and preceded today’s fuller reassertion of identity but still
in the global context.”

In a brief video clip, Chinese science fiction writer Hao Jingfang
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envisions
digital connectivity creating neural networks linked up to a controlling
urban brain in future cities. Koolhaas responds: “If we simply let
cyberspace run its course to a future determined by Silicon Valley, those
libertarian-minded engineers will paradoxically lead us to cities shackled
by algorithmic conformity. It would be a neural network, yes, but one that
operates in lock step.”

What so many celebrate as a technological wonder, Koolhaas fears: “What we
know without hesitation is that self-driving cars will only work at the
price of total conformity of every member of society. Such a system of
mobility will depend on everyone behaving with no exceptions. As
exemplified by self-driving cars, there is a built-in authoritarianism in
this managed space of flows we call cyberspace.”
Nathan Gardels
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Editor in Chief
Kathleen Miles
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001YGvLrdTuTteboqD66D2g6j_K2CAFieYfG1GZ2DeQXYVFP8RLRyyL3lIpR_L9AMhm8U6Kiu0oiN4Ge3kK834hnqFF0t6TEclTJAS9QgxW-s6uFIlP2_egZ2pAuPxlwQsd_V4OlGFSmMemDqUZ8jVE66UdyjT6Z5Lg&c=46Lp1KE_ylmYaK78IJeOb0IVDWnpnepfcdE7dYL4MNplkNS6G_UQNQ==&ch=azXqw00fun1-QxyNZTMcsyb4UROuckdVbOFXPUAOYqX52g7fe0vJzw==>,
Executive Editor
Dawn Nakagawa
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Vice President of Operations
Peter Mellgard
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Features Editor
Alex Gardels
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Video Editor
Clarissa Pharr
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Associate Editor
Rosa O’Hara
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Social Editor

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EDITORIAL BOARD: Nicolas Berggruen, Nathan Gardels, Kathleen Miles, Jackson
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