Combining innovative theorizing with radical critique, Sami Moisio and Ugo Rossi rethink the strategic role of cities, the stakes in transformative politics, and the meaning of the urban field in the era of technocapitalism.
-- Jamie Peck, Professor of Geography and Distinguished University Scholar, University of British Columbia
In a much needed critique of techno-monopoly capitalism and its urban ramifications, The Urban Field offers an astute political economy that parses out the role of tech companies and the state upon an array of affective social and political worlds. Drawing upon an array of theoretical interventions around the devastating powers of technocapitalism, Moisio and Rossi also offer their own unique perspectives to the urban field a space which encompasses a range of domains including labour, human capital, startup economies and governmentality. Not only does this book illuminate how techno-monopolism functions in the day-to-day, but it also importantly helps us understand how particular moments of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have led us to this contemporary conjuncture.
-- Erin McElroy, University of Washington, author of Silicon Valley Imperialism: Techno Fantasies and Frictions in Postsocialist Times
In this sharp and critical intervention into both political economy and urban geography, Moisio and Rossi argue that our age of techno-monopoly capitalism hinges on a mode of governmentality engineered to extract value from vital urban processes and forms of life. Rather than a devolution to techno-feudalism, The Urban Field reveals an intensification, diversification, and (re)urbanization of capital accumulation, coordinated not just by monopolist corporations or venture capital investors but by a corporatized state whose logics mirror that of a tech startup.
-- Aaron Shapiro, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, author of Design, Control, Predict: Logistical Governance in the Smart City
In this fascinating and timely book, Moisio and Rossi articulate an original political-economic framework for understanding the interpenetration of techno-monopoly capitalism and cities. Reminiscent of key contributions (such as those of Storper & Walker, Scott, Jessop) which described and deciphered economic geographic transitions away from Fordist regulation towards neoliberal competition-driven systems, Moisio and Rossi take stock of how state-sanctioned digital monopolies are conceptualizing, creating and extracting value from (and across) the urban field a relational space characterized by the juxtaposition of data, labour, institutions, governments, capital, and power. Broad in theoretical scope, precise and succinct in empirical exemplification, this short book masterfully makes sense of how the discourses and materialities of techno-monopoly capitalism are reconfiguring the urban field of the 2020s.
-- Richard Shearmur, Professor of Economic Geography, McGill University
Moisio and Rossi offer a detailed view of states dependence on the giants of the tech industry for visions of progress and promises of jobs while subjecting workers and users to ever greater control. They reveal the urban field to be a strategic site of value creation through tourism, monetization and precarious work a crucial critique for both urban scholars and theorists of innovation.
-- Sharon Zukin, author of The Innovation Complex: Cities, Tech, and the New Economy
Sami Moisio and Ugo Rossis The Urban Field presents a cutting-edge analysis of urban political economy in the digital era. Shifting analysis away from techno-feudalism and examining the impacts of techno-monopoly capitalism on urban governance, the authors make a strong case for the corporatization of urban life and the state beginning with the first boom of digital start-ups at the end of the twentieth century. The book indicates the many ways in which national state and city governments prop up the tech firms to enable the creation and extraction of economic value to achieve the entrepreneurialization of living and privatization of governance.
-- Nancy Ettlinger, Professor of Critical Human Geography, Ohio State University, and author of Algorithms and the Assault on Critical Thought