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City-as-Prison: A Panoptic Reading of Urban Logistics

Author

Listed:
  • Gilles Paché

    (CERGAM - Centre d'Études et de Recherche en Gestion d'Aix-Marseille - AMU - Aix Marseille Université - UTLN - Université de Toulon)

Abstract

Digitalization has become a central driver of contemporary urban governance, reshaping how authorities regulate movement, allocate resources, and manage public space. While often portrayed as innovation-led progress, these systems carry far-reaching implications for social order, accountability, and individual autonomy. Acknowledging these tensions is essential to understanding the political stakes of technologically mediated urban life. Within this context, the contemporary city increasingly operates as a logistical apparatus of control, where the apparent fluidity of human and products circulation conceals a deeply disciplinary infrastructure. Ostensibly neutral urban components-digital platforms, delivery hubs, and surveillance technologiesparticipate in an invisible regulation of behavior within the paradigm of the city-as-prison. This panoptic dynamic, sustained by the promise of efficiency, simultaneously reinforces spatial and social segregation. Logistics, far from being a mere functional layer, emerges as a central vector of urban power. Yet, against this technocratic rationality, forms of resistance are taking shape-challenging the algorithmic governance of urban life. Participatory platforms, tactical interventions in public space, and the subversive repurposing of urban data express a collective desire to reclaim control over city resources. These initiatives go beyond critique; they articulate an alternative vision of urbanity grounded in transparency, collective deliberation, and spatial justice. By bridging infrastructural critique and democratic experimentation, the article argues that urban technologies can be reconfigured beyond their instrumental logic.

Suggested Citation

  • Gilles Paché, 2025. "City-as-Prison: A Panoptic Reading of Urban Logistics," Post-Print hal-05401152, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:hal-05401152
    DOI: 10.7176/jrdm/96-01
    Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://hal.science/hal-05401152v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Gilles Paché, 2024. "The Nexus of Logistics and Social Control: Mass Surveillance in the Digital Era," Post-Print hal-04854943, HAL.
    2. Michael K. McCall & Margaret M. Skutsch & Jordi Honey-Roses, 2021. "Surveillance in the COVID-19 Normal: Tracking, Tracing, and Snooping – Trade-Offs in Safety and Autonomy in the E-City," International Journal of E-Planning Research (IJEPR), IGI Global Scientific Publishing, vol. 10(2), pages 27-44, April.
    3. Baha M. Mohsen, 2024. "AI-Driven Optimization of Urban Logistics in Smart Cities: Integrating Autonomous Vehicles and IoT for Efficient Delivery Systems," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 16(24), pages 1-24, December.
    Full references (including those not matched with items on IDEAS)

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