Infrastructure in formation: the politics and practices of making progress with infrastructure
Hybrid event: please use webinar registration link below.
Infrastructure has long been understood as central to enabling “progress”, a visible sign of modernity and development. Urban scholars have pushed back against modernist notions of the networked city as the teleological end of infrastructure, yet there remains uncertainty and debate over how to make sense of infrastructure’s temporality. We emphasize that – analytically – infrastructure is always “in formation”. To understand infrastructure’s politics, we consider how progress and completion are narrated, imagined, adjusted to and politicized by providing three contrasting infrastructure vignettes in Nairobi. In our analysis of a bus rapid transit system, we see incremental changes and proclamation of an envisioned final state. In our consideration of the laying of pipes, wires and sidewalks, we see acceptance of what are seemingly indefinite disruptions and politicians wanting to be associated – for as long as possible – with the building of infrastructure. Finally, we examine sanitation infrastructure, where particular toilets may be “complete” but their connections to elsewhere remain in flux and future configurations remain ambiguous. We conclude by reflecting on the politics of the temporality of infrastructure, and the ongoing significance of “making progress” and the possibility of completion for the kinds of infrastructure that are imagined, funded, built and supported.
Date: 30 October 2024, 16:00 (Wednesday, 3rd week, Michaelmas 2024)
Venue: 13 Bevington Road, 13 Bevington Road OX2 6NB
Venue Details: ASC seminar room
Speakers: Mwangi Mwaura (Oxford), Mary Lawhon (Edinburgh)
Organising department: Centre for African Studies
Organiser: Jason Mosley (University of Oxford)
Part of: Northeast Africa Forum seminar series
Booking required?: Recommended
Booking url: https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/165ab72c-245d-40af-9cb9-5f9f6cc194b4@cc95de1b-97f5-4f93-b4ba-fe68b852cf91
Audience: Public
Editor: Jason Mosley