Tag Archives: data frictions

New paper: The digital turn in planning and the production of ‘good enough’ planning systems

The project has a new paper published online first in European Planning Studies.

Kayanan, C., Mutter, S., Davret, J. and Kitchin, R. (2025, online first) The digital turn in planning and the production of ‘good enough’ planning systems. European Planning Studies. doi: 10.1080/09654313.2025.2599869

An open access, post-print version is available on MURAL

Abstract

The digitalization of planning has taken place in a context where planning work is on-going and cannot be halted, and in which there are embedded institutional and technical systems and practices, as well as a number of technical, regulatory and sociocultural data frictions. This context has led to a sub-optimizing approach to digitalization. In this paper, we examine the digital mediation of planning through an in-depth case study of a multiscale planning development and control data ecosystem in Ireland. We detail the incrementalist nature of the digital turn in planning and how this institutionalizes a ‘good enough’ digitalized planning system; that is, a system that is functional and performs essential tasks, but not necessarily in an optimal manner and which is always open to potential improvements. We develop a conceptual basis for assessing ‘good enough’ and
through its application contend that ‘good enough’ planning is a sufficient and reasonable state of affairs given the substantive challenges of creating and maintaining a complex data
ecosystem and that there are incremental limits to achieving ‘better planning’. As such, any technological solutionist claims promising to radically reconfigure and fix planning’s operation shortcomings, such as the introduction of artificial intelligence tools, require careful assessment.

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New paper: Data mobilities

Our paper on data mobilities has been published in the journal Mobilities. Based on work undertaken for the Local Government Management Agency, the paper reconsiders how data is shared and circulated is conceptualised: in our case, using the empirical example the development and control functions of the Irish planning system.

Kitchin, R., Davret, J., Kayanan, C. & Mutter, S. (2025, online first) Data mobilities: rethinking the movement and circulation of digital data. Mobilities https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17450101.2025.2481309

Abstract

The mobility of data has been variously described as data: flows, streams, journeys, threads, transfers, exchanges, and circulation. In each case, data mobility is conceived as a movement from here to there; that data moves along a chain of receivers and senders. However, we contend that the metaphors of data flows (or journeys, threads, etc.) does not reflect well the processes by which digital data are shared. Rather, we propose moving from a metaphorical conceptualisation to a description of the actual mechanisms of mobility. Through a case study of the planning data ecosystem in Ireland, we detail how data replicate (replica copies produced), with the original source retaining the data and a new source gaining it, and data proliferate (multiply) across systems and sites when made available. As data replicate and proliferate, they are transformed through processes of data cleaning, data wrangling, and data fusion, producing new incarnations of the source data. Importantly, this rethinking of data mobility makes clear how and why various data incarnations are produced and, in so doing, create fundamental issues regarding the integrity of data sharing and data-driven work, the repeatability, replicability and reproducibility of science, and data sovereignty and the control of data use.

Keywords: Data mobilities, data journeys, replication, proliferation, data frictions, data seams

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