Praxis: changing world, changing self
In: Third world quarterly, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 510-512
ISSN: 1360-2241
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In: Third world quarterly, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 510-512
ISSN: 1360-2241
In: Development in practice, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 45-56
ISSN: 1364-9213
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Band 31, Heft 4, S. 1075-1098
ISSN: 1545-6943
In: Capitalism, nature, socialism: CNS ; a journal of socialist ecology, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 125-127
ISSN: 1045-5752
O'Reilley reviews Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution and Profit by Vandana Shiva.
In: Society and natural resources, Band 34, Heft 4, S. 432-448
ISSN: 1521-0723
In: Development in practice, Band 27, Heft 7, S. 940-951
ISSN: 1364-9213
In: Development in practice, Band 25, Heft 6, S. 815-831
ISSN: 1364-9213
In: Social science quarterly, Band 78, Heft 2, S. 619-621
ISSN: 0038-4941
In: Social science quarterly, Band 78, Heft 2, S. 619-621
ISSN: 0038-4941
In: Women's studies: an interdisciplinary journal, Band 46, Heft 5, S. 495-505
ISSN: 1547-7045
Recent studies have reconceptualized infrastructure as comprising both material and social processes, thus offering insights into lived experiences, governance, and socio-spatial reordering. More specific attention to infrastructure's temporality has challenged its supposed inertia and inevitable completeness, leading to an engagement with questions of the dynamics of infrastructure over different phases of its lifespan, and their generative effects. In this paper, we advance these debates through a focus on the processes of decay, maintenance, and repair that characterize such phases of infrastructural life, by exploring how specific infrastructures are materially shaped by, and shape, social, political, and socio-ecological arrangements. Our intervention has two related aims: first, to conceptualize decay, maintenance, and repair as both temporal phases of infrastructure's dynamic materiality and its specific affective conditions; second, to trace how these phases of infrastructural life rework embodied labor, differentiated citizenship, and socio-ecological relations. We argue that attention to infrastructure's "temporal fragility" elucidates the articulation between everyday capacities and desires to labor, the creation of and demands made by political constituents, and the uneven distribution of opportunities and resources.
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In: Gender and development, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 167-183
ISSN: 1364-9221
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 93, S. 193-205
In: The journal of development studies, Band 53, Heft 11, S. 1915-1928
ISSN: 1743-9140
World Affairs Online
In: The journal of development studies, Band 53, Heft 11, S. 1915-1928
ISSN: 1743-9140