City 25(5-6): Morgan Mouton & Melanie Rock (Video Abstract)

Governing cities as more-than-human entities: From the population of databases to the legibility of urban populations

The field of urban studies has scrutinised digital technologies and their proliferation, but rather little attention has been paid to databases. Furthermore, contributions to date have focused almost exclusively on how digital technologies interface with human populations in cities. By contrast, we draw attention to databases maintained by city governments that contain identifying information about pet dogs and their legal owners in cities. Methodologically, our study merges database ethnography with multi-species ethnography. Conceptually, we contend that “dog data” contribute to orderly conduct in urban space. This orientation to urban governance illustrates “trans-biopolitics,” in the sense of socially-situated and technologically-mediated power relations that operate through multi-species entanglements. As such, this article extends the literature on (neoliberal) urban policing by providing a fine-grained analysis of how emergent forms of social control become palpable. In general terms, the adoption and use of digital technologies by city governments has increased their capacity to enforce rules and regulations. Overall, we find that the more legible dogs and their legal owners become in databases, the more governable both dogs and people become in urban life.

https://doi.org/10.1080/13604813.2021.1981026

Morgan Mouton is a research associate at Lab’URBA (Université Gustave Eiffel – Université Paris-Est Créteil) and a member of the O’Brien Institute for Public Health (University of Calgary). Email: morgan.mouton@u-pem.fr

Melanie Rock is a professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences, (Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary). She also holds adjunct appointments in anthropology, social work, and veterinary medicine; and she is a member of the Hotchkiss Brain Institute and of the O’Brien Institute for Public Health (University of Calgary). Email: mrock@ucalgary.ca

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