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Social maps that reveal a city's intersections — and separations

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    When we think about mapping cities,
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    we tend to think about roads
    and streets and buildings,
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    and the settlement narrative
    that led to their creation,
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    or you might think about
    the bold vision of a urban designer,
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    but there's other ways
    to think about mapping cities
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    and how they got to be made.
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    Today, I want to show you
    a new kind of map.
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    This is not a geographic map.
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    This is a map of the relationships
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    between people in my hometown
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    of Baltimore, Maryland,
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    and what you can see here is that
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    each dot represents a person,
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    each line represents a relationship
    between those people,
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    and each color represents a community
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    within the network.
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    Now, I'm here on the green side,
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    down on the far side, where the geeks are,
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    and TEDx also is down on the far right.
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    Now, on the other side of the network,
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    you tend to have primarily
    African-American and Latino folks
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    who are really concerned about somewhat
    different things than the geeks are,
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    but just to give some sense,
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    the green part of the network
    we call Smaltimore,
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    for those of us that inhabit it,
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    because it seems as though
    we're living in a very small town.
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    We see the same people
    over and over again,
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    but that's because
    we're not really exploring
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    the full depth and breadth of the city.
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    On the other end of the network,
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    you have folks who are interested
    in things like hip-hop music
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    and they even identify with living
    in the DC/Maryland/Virginia area
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    over, say, the Baltimore city
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    designation proper.
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    But in the middle, you see that there's
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    something that connects
    the two communities together,
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    and that's sports.
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    We have the Baltimore Orioles,
    the Baltimore Ravens football team,
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    Michael Phelps, the Olympian.
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    Under Armour, you may have heard of,
    is a Baltimore company,
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    and that community of sports
    acts as the only bridge
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    between these two ends of the network.
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    Let's take a look at San Francisco.
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    You see something a little bit
    different happening in San Francisco.
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    On the one hand, you do have kind of
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    the media, politics, and news lobe
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    that tends to exist
    in Baltimore and other cities,
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    but you also have this
    very predominant group
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    of geeks and techies that are sort of
    taking over the top half of the network,
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    and there's even a group
    that's so distinct and clear
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    that we can identify it as Twitter employees,
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    next to the geeks, in between
    the gamers and the geeks,
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    at the opposite end
    of the hip-hop spectrum.
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    So you can see, though,
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    that the tensions that we've
    heard about in San Francisco
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    in terms of people being
    concerned about gentrification
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    and all the tech companies
    that are bringing new wealth
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    and settlement into the city are real,
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    and you can actually see
    that documented here.
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    You can see, the LGBT community
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    is not really getting along
    with the geek community that well,
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    the arts community, the music community.
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    And so it leads to things like this.
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    Somebody sent me
    this photo a few weeks ago,
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    and it shows kind of what is happening
    on the ground in San Francisco,
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    and I think you can
    actually try to understand that
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    through looking at a map like this.
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    Let's take a look at Rio de Janeiro.
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    I spent the last few weeks
    gathering data about Rio,
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    and one of the things that
    stood out to me about this city
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    is that everything's
    really kind of mixed up.
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    It's a very heterogenous city
    in a way that Baltimore
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    or San Francisco is not.
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    You still have the lobe of people involved
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    with government, newspapers,
    politics, columnists.
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    TEDxRio is down in the lower right,
    right next to bloggers and writers.
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    But then you also have this
    tremendous diversity of people
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    that are interested
    in different kinds of music.
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    Even Justin Bieber fans
    are represented here.
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    Other boy bands, country singers,
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    gospel music, funk and rap
    and stand-up comedy,
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    and there's even, like, a whole section
    around drugs and jokes.
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    How cool is that?
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    And then the Flamengo football team
    is also represented here.
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    So you have that same kind of spread
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    of sports and civics
    and the arts and music,
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    but it's represented
    in a very different way,
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    and I think that maybe fits
    with our understanding of Rio
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    as being a very multicultural,
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    musical diverse city.
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    So we have all this data.
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    It's an incredibly rich set of data
    that we have about cities now,
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    maybe even richer than any data set
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    that we've ever had before.
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    So what can we do with it?
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    Well, I think the first thing
    that we can try to understand
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    is that segregation is a social construct.
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    It's something that we choose to do,
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    and we could choose not to do it,
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    and if you kind of think about it,
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    what we're doing with this data
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    is aiming a space telescope at a city
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    and looking at it as if was
    a giant high school cafeteria,
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    and seeing how everybody arranged
    themselves in a seating chart.
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    Well maybe it's time to shake up
    the seating chart a little bit.
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    The other thing that we start to realize
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    is that race is a really
    poor proxy for diversity.
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    We've got people represented
    from all different types of races
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    across the entire map here
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    that in fact, only looking at race
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    doesn't really contribute to
    our development of diversity.
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    So if we're trying to use diversity
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    as a way to tackle some of our
    more intractable problems,
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    we need to start to think about diversity
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    in a new way.
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    And lastly, we have the ability to create
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    interventions to start to reshape
    our cities in a new way,
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    and I believe that if
    we have that capability,
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    we may even bear some
    responsibility to do so.
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    So what is a city?
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    I think some might say that it is
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    a geographic area or a collection
    of streets and buildings,
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    but I believe that a city is the sum
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    of the relationships
    of the people that live there,
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    and I believe that
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    if we can start to document
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    those relationships in a real way,
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    then maybe we have a real shot
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    at creating those kinds of cities
    that we'd like to have.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Social maps that reveal a city's intersections — and separations
Speaker:
Dave Troy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:28

English subtitles

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