Litcius/Paper detail

Pandemic in a smart city: Singapore’s COVID-19 management through technology & society

Diganta Das, Jiajie Zhang

2020Urban Geography103 citationsDOI

Abstract

On 23 January 2020, Singapore announced its first COVID-19 case, becoming one of the first countries to be affected by the virus outside China. The government acted swiftly, closed its borders, introduced circuit-breaking measures, and deployed public health and medical expertise in tackling the virus. Both technology and human resources were used extensively for contact tracing, quarantining, and pathogenic management. While all these measures helped in a successful containment initially, the second wave of COVID-19 cases emerged at the foreign worker dormitories, affecting thousands of workers. Singapore's approach in tackling the situation shifted rapidly and began to involve civil society organizations and individuals in the fight against the virus. In this paper, we argue that while state-led technologies such asTraceTogether and Safe Entry helped in the techno-governance of bodies on the move, bottom-up digital solutions, and innovative engagement of individuals are equally crucial in building a smart and resilient Singapore.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicGovernment (linguistics)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Civil societyCorporate governanceChinaState (computer science)Political scienceEconomic growthBusinessPublic relationsPublic administrationPoliticsLawEconomicsMedicineLinguisticsPathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)FinanceDiseasePhilosophyAlgorithmComputer scienceCOVID-19 Digital Contact TracingHuman Mobility and Location-Based AnalysisDigital Economy and Work Transformation