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Infrastructures and Social Complexity: A Companion [Kietas viršelis]

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Edited by (University of Manchester, UK), Edited by (Osaka University, Japan), Edited by (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 442 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 703 g, 7 Line drawings, black and white; 15 Halftones, black and white; 22 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: CRESC
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Oct-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138654949
  • ISBN-13: 9781138654945
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 442 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 703 g, 7 Line drawings, black and white; 15 Halftones, black and white; 22 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: CRESC
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Oct-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138654949
  • ISBN-13: 9781138654945
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Contemporary forms of infrastructural development herald alternative futures through their incorporation of digital technologies, mobile capital, international politics and the promises and fears of enhanced connectivity. In tandem with increasing concerns about climate change and the anthropocene, there is further an urgency around contemporary infrastructural provision: a concern about its fragility, and an awareness that these connective, relational systems significantly shape both local and planetary futures in ways that we need to understand more clearly. Offering a rich set of empirically detailed and conceptually sophisticated studies of infrastructural systems and experiments, present and past, contributors to this volume address both the transformative potential of infrastructural systems and their stasis. Covering infrastructural figures; their ontologies, epistemologies, classifications and politics, and spanning development, urban, energy, environmental and information infrastructures, the chapters explore both the promises and failures of infrastructure. Tracing the experimental histories of a wide range of infrastructures and documenting their variable outcomes, the volume offers a unique set of analytical perspectives on contemporary infrastructural complications. These studies bring a systematic empirical and analytical attention to human worlds as they intersect with more-than-human worlds, whether technological or biological.
List of figures
ix
List of contributors
x
Acknowledgment xvii
1 Introduction: Infrastructural complications
1(22)
Penny Harvey
Casper Bruun Jensen
Atsuro Morita
PART I Development infrastructures
23(64)
2 Keyword: infrastructure: How a humble French engineering term shaped the modern world
27(13)
Ashley Carse
3 Surveying the future perfect: Anthropology, development and the promise of infrastructure
40(11)
Kregg Hetherington
4 Containment and disruption: The illicit economies of infrastructural investment
51(13)
Penny Harvey
5 Infrastructure reform in Indigenous Australia: From mud to mining to military empires
64(12)
Tess Lea
6 Becoming a city: Infrastructural fetishism and scattered urbanization in Vientiane, Laos
76(11)
Miki Namba
PART II Urban infrastructures
87(70)
7 On pressure and the politics of water infrastructure
91(11)
Nikhil Anand
8 Infrastructuring new urban common worlds?: On material politics, civic attachments, and partially existing wind turbines
102(13)
Anders Blok
9 Remediating infrastructure: Tokyo's commuter train network and the new autonomy
115(13)
Michael Fisch
10 The generic city: Examples from Jakarta, Indonesia, and Maputo, Mozambique
128(13)
Morten Nielsen
Abdoumaliq Simone
11 Ecologies in beta: The city as infrastructure of apprenticeships
141(16)
Alberto Corsin Jimenez
Adolfo Estalella
PART III Energy infrastructures
157(54)
12 Living with the earth: More-than-human arrangements in seismic landscapes
161(13)
James Maguire
Brit Ross Winthereik
13 Revolutionary infrastructure
174(13)
Dominic Boyer
14 Infrastructure and the earth
187(11)
Andrew Barry
15 Off the grid: Infrastructure and energy beyond the mains
198(13)
Jamie Cross
PART IV Environmental infrastructures
211(56)
16 River basin: The development of the scientific concept and infrastructures in the Chao Phraya Delta, Thailand
215(12)
Atsuro Morita
17 Multinatural infrastructure: Phnom Penh sewage
227(15)
Casper Bruun Jensen
18 Burial and resurrection in the Anthropocene: Infrastructures of waste
242(11)
Myra J. Hird
19 Evidence, infrastructure and worth
253(14)
Sandra Calkins
Richard Rottenburg
PART V Infrastructural figures
267(68)
20 When infrastructures fail: An ethnographic note in the middle of an Aegean crisis
271(13)
Sarah Green
21 Infrastructure as gesture
284(12)
Gisa Weszkalnys
22 The black list: On infrastructural indeterminacy and its reverberations
296(13)
Madeleine Reeves
23 Infrastructural inversion and reflexivity: A "postcolonial" biodiversity databasing project in India
309(14)
Moe Nakazora
24 Survivals as infrastructure: Twenty-first-century struggles with household and family in formal computations
323(12)
Jane I. Guyer
PART VI Digital infrastructures
335(69)
25 Downscaling: From global to local in the climate knowledge infrastructure
339(13)
Paul N. Edwards
26 The problem of action: Infrastructure, planning and the informational environment
352(14)
Hannah Knox
27 Machinic operations: Data structuring, healthcare and governmentality
366(13)
Andrew Goffey
28 Infrastructures in name only?: Identifying effects of depth and scale
379(12)
Adrian Mackenzie
29 How knowledge infrastructures learn
391(13)
Geoffrey C. Bowker
Index 404
Penny Harvey is Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Manchester, UK

Casper Bruun Jensen is Associate Professor/Senior Researcher at Osaka University, Japan

Atsuro Morita is Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology, School of Human Sciences, Osaka University, Japan