ALGORITHMIC SUTURING: Platforms, Motorcycles and the ‘Last Mile’ in Urban Africa

First published: 16 August 2023

Abstract

The ‘last mile’ is not only a powerful metaphor of contemporary life, but also the tangible site of a challenge, whether for governments wanting to reach their citizens or companies wanting to reach their customers. In urban Africa this challenge is compounded by the fragmented material condition of cities. As a result, a growing number of tech companies have been compelled by the possibility of creating digital platforms that address the unique logistical configurations of African cities, often enrolling informal systems such as motorcycle taxis to address spatial and economic fragmentation. Through the perspective of three Nairobi-based startups that incorporate motorcycle taxis into their last-mile platforms, this article illustrates how processes of ‘algorithmic suturing’ knit together the loose ends of splintered urban networks thanks to platform business models that visualize the last mile as a site of optimization. In parallel with common understandings of suturing within African infrastructure debates which foreground makeshift practices of the urban poor, this article argues that algorithmic suturing is a speculative endeavour through which urban fractures are made legible as sites of value. By stitching together city fragments, these platforms envision large data-driven urban economies which interface with informal mobility networks and the shifting urban demographic of the lower-middle class.

Acknowledgements

This article would not have been possible without the collaboration of our wider team: Rike Sitas, Prince Guma, Alexis Gatoni and Alicia Fortuin. A draft of this work was presented at the Beyond Splintering Urbanism workshop in Autun, where we benefited from Steve Graham and Sophie Schramm’s close readings and the generous support of Simon Marvin, Jon Silver, Alan Wiig, Jonathan Rutherford, Andy Karvonen and Colin McFarlane. Andrea Pollio’s work has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 886772. Liza Rose Cirolia and Jack Ong’iro Odeo received funding from the Volvo Education and Research Foundation (VREF) under the Mobility and Accessibility in African Cities programme (MAC). [Correction added on 14 September 2023, after first online publication: An amendment to the unnumbered footnote on the first page has been made to acknowledge Andy Karvonen among those who gave generous support.]

Journal URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.13200

RESEARCH DETAILS

Title:

ALGORITHMIC SUTURING: Platforms, Motorcycles and the ‘Last Mile’ in Urban Africa

Research details