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Vietnam's 'Productive Frictions'

Vietnam's 'Productive Frictions'

Update: 2024-12-29
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Today’s guest is Huê-Tâm Jamme, an assistant professor at Arizona State University’s School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning.

Huê-Tâm explores the effects of new technologies on space and society, especially on how people move, work, shop, and socialize in cities - and she has extensive research experience in Vietnam.

We discussed her theory of ‘productive frictions’ in urban areas; the impact of mass transit on daily life; misguided discussions of motorbike bans in urban centers; and how Ho Chi Minh City should harness its unique nature to present itself as a new model for urban development, rather than pursuing the same strategies used by other cities.

Related Links:

Productive Frictions: A Theory of Mobility and Street Commerce Grounded in Vietnam's Motorbike-Centric Urbanism (PDF)

‘Historic achievement’: Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City’s first metro line opens

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Vietnam's 'Productive Frictions'

Vietnam's 'Productive Frictions'

Michael Tatarski