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A Classification Scheme for Hostile Design

Robert Rosenberger

2023Philosophy of the City Journal10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A discussion is emerging over what is called “hostile design,” among other names, i.e., the construction of public-space objects in ways that exclude particular usages, and with an alleged effect of discrimination against already vulnerable populations. Critics outline various examples, from spikes added to a ledge to deter loiterers from sitting, to armrests added to a bench to discourage the unhoused from using it as a place to sleep. In an effort to sharpen the notion of hostile design as a critical tool, I develop an original typology, one in which the various examples are organized in terms of the mechanisms through which their hostility is enacted. This sets up reflections on some variables of hostile design—such as their level of “conspicuousness,” and their “domain of effect”—that cut differently across these categories.

Topics & Concepts

TypologyHostilityDomain (mathematical analysis)Space (punctuation)Computer scienceScheme (mathematics)Public domainHuman–computer interactionPsychologyComputer securitySocial psychologySociologyMathematicsHistoryArchaeologyOperating systemMathematical analysisAnthropologyInnovative Human-Technology InteractionCrafts, Textile, and DesignDesign Education and Practice
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