“Too Much Fulfilment”
Title | “Too Much Fulfilment” |
Year for Search | 2019 |
Authors | Richardson, Lizzie |
Secondary Authors | Graham, Mark, Kitchin, Rob, Mattern, Shannon, and Shaw, Joe |
Secondary Title | How to Run a City Like Amazon, and Other Fables |
Pagination | 266-88 [72-78] |
Date Published | 2019 |
Publisher | Meatspace Press |
Place Published | NP |
ISBN Number | 978-0-9955776-7-1 |
Keywords | English author, Female author |
Annotation | Food delivery has entirely taken over the food industry and effectively controls what people get to eat, based on a company like Deilveroo. All the stories in the book are responses to a recent book, A New City O/S: The Power of Open, Collaborative, and Distributed Government (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2017), by Stephen Goldsmith and Neil Kleiman, that proposes, in the editors’ interpretation, that cities should act more like Amazon in dealing with their citizens. |
Author Note | The female author was, at the time of publication, a Fellow at Durham University, and is now a Junior Professor of Digital Geography at the University of Frankfurt. |
Full Text | 2019 Richardson, Lizzie. “Too Much Fulfilment.” How to Run a City Like Amazon, and Other Fables. Ed. Mark Graham, Rob Kitchin, Shannon Mattern, and Joe Shaw (Np: Meatspace Press, 2019), 266-88 [72-78]. Food delivery has entirely taken over the food industry and effectively controls what people get to eat, based on a company like Deilveroo. All the stories in the book are responses to a recent book, A New City O/S: The Power of Open, Collaborative, and Distributed Government (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2017), by Stephen Goldsmith and Neil Kleiman, that proposes, in the editors’ interpretation, that cities should act more like Amazon in dealing with their citizens. The female author was, at the time of publication, a Fellow at Durham University, and is now a Junior Professor of Digital Geography at the University of Frankfurt. |