New forms of social engineering are moulding society – often driven  by short term trends and effects rather than long-term social  responsibility. Sensationalistic media dominate, culture becomes little  more than a market, politics is a façade, and the city has become the  stage for the whole drama. A range of contributors, including Pier  Vittorio Aureli, Jan Willem Duyvendak, Urban-Think Tank and Eyal Weizman  explore this phenomenon and the consequences for architecture and urban  planning.
 
        Our society seems to be locked into a position in which the user’s and  voter’s choices determine how we shall live in the future. A disturbing  collective urban life in a giant Big Brother House looms, a material and  social world in which sensationalistic media and its commercial  translation dominate. Our sense of what is real and what is quality is  on the verge of collapse. The practice and education of the engineers of  this society is determined by short-term effect instead of long-term  social responsibility. Culture becomes little more than a market,  politics its façade and the city its stage. Instead of reviving old  school high modernist social engineering or claiming the need for an  intellectual junta, we solicit new forms of social engineering. Where  shall this lead?
Volume 16. Engineering Society includes contributions by Pier Vittorio Aureli, Michel  Bauwens, Andrew Bullen, Lard Buurman, Roger Cremers, Aukje Dekker, Jan  Willem Duyvendak, Erik Gerritsen, Dionisio González, jeroen Heester,  Gabu Heindl, Jeremy Hight, Joost Janmaat, Desmond Kwame, Dick de Lange,  Jeroen de Lange, Matt Lewis, Neville Mars, The Office for Social  Engineering, Wouter Oostendorp, Drehli Robnik, Justus Uitermark, Jouke  Sieswerda, Anoek Steketee, Bill Thompson, Urban-Think Tank, Wouter  Vanstiphout, Steven Wassenaar, Eyal Weizman