Newton Mobility Grants
Scheme 2016
British Academy &
Office of Higher Education
Commission, Thailand
Centre for Contemporary Social and
Cultural Studies, Faculty of Sociology
and Anthropology, Thammasat University
Media Ethnography Group,
Department of Media and Communications,
Goldsmiths, University of London
research seminar
30 May 2017 | 13.00 – 18.00
Professor Stuart Hall Building, Room 305, Goldsmiths, University of London
Thailand 4.0 or ‘Smart Thailand’: Socio-technical imaginaries of connectivity under authoritarian rule
Richard L MacDonald
Department of Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London
This presentation offers a preliminary analysis and a methodological reflection. The analysis draws on the fertile concept of socio-technical imaginaries (Jasanoff and Kim 2015) to explore the dialectic of connection and control in state policy and action, and the migration and retooling of a Silicon Valley, post-political, efficiency rhetoric in a context of authoritarian rule. The methodological reflection envisages an ethnography that addresses the socio-technical imaginaries of connectivity through a comparative focus on two of the planned projects through which Thailand 4.0 is to be materialised: village broadband and smart cities. An ethnography of projects, as Walker suggests, implies attending to the unfolding time space through which regulatory intent engages and confronts local desire.