Resilient automation: Towards a non-anthropocentric planetarity view [Automatización resiliente: hacia una planetariedad no-antropocéntrica]

By becoming key to cities’ functioning, essential workers allowed the rest of us to endure quarantine. In terms of commodity distribution, the assemblage between digital applications and human couriers made quarantine possible on a global scale. This model, argues this text, allows us to imagine new forms of work and relationships between people, which go beyond urbanism thought only based on consumers. © 2021, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile 1. All rights reserved.

Authors
Brina L.1 , Medvedenko N.2 , Provenzano A.3 , Tetekin A. 4
Journal
ARQ
Publisher
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile 1
Number of issue
107
Pages
126-137
Status
Published
Volume
2021
Year
2021
Organizations
  • 1 Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina
  • 2 St. Petersburg State University, Russian Federation
  • 3 Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy
  • 4 Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia, Moscow, Russian Federation
Keywords
20/21; Essay; Logistics; Pandemic; Technosphere
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