2019
DOI: 10.1177/2399654419861110
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Negotiating networked infrastructural inequalities: Governance, electricity access, and space in Rio de Janeiro

Abstract: In cities of the Global South, universal physical access to networked infrastructures, such as electricity and water, is often presented as enabling the reduction of social and spatial divisions. Whereas most of the discussions in these cities have focused on the obstacles to networked infrastructure expansion, little attention has been paid to the increased universalization of the physical electricity network in several Latin American, Caribbean, and Asian cities. This article unpacks the discussions around t… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Attention to the simultaneous material and socio-political dimensions of urban infrastructure has been effective in broadening conceptualizations of governance to include an assemblage of both the human (institutions, politics, social relations) and the non-human (biophysical processes, environmental conditions, and unruly pipes and pumps) (McFarlane, 2008: 348). Research within this "infrastructural turn" shows how the materiality of infrastructure itself becomes an organizing force of governance, as infrastructural breakdown, disruptions, fractures, and fragments emerge from and shape social power relations, state power, and the regulation of key resources and services in the city (Amin and Cirolia, 2018;Anand, 2015;Pilo', 2021;Silver, 2015).…”
Section: The 'Infrastructural Turn' and Everyday Urban Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attention to the simultaneous material and socio-political dimensions of urban infrastructure has been effective in broadening conceptualizations of governance to include an assemblage of both the human (institutions, politics, social relations) and the non-human (biophysical processes, environmental conditions, and unruly pipes and pumps) (McFarlane, 2008: 348). Research within this "infrastructural turn" shows how the materiality of infrastructure itself becomes an organizing force of governance, as infrastructural breakdown, disruptions, fractures, and fragments emerge from and shape social power relations, state power, and the regulation of key resources and services in the city (Amin and Cirolia, 2018;Anand, 2015;Pilo', 2021;Silver, 2015).…”
Section: The 'Infrastructural Turn' and Everyday Urban Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Negotiations and activism over water infrastructure are equally as important in this sphere. Here as elsewhere (see Pilo', 2021) infrastructural negotiation becomes a tool through which governable publics are reproduced. Infrastructural gains or losses may act as a material indicator of communities' enmeshment with systems of control, so that the ability to access or obtain such infrastructures or the loss thereof is indicative of both the citizenship claims of the public (see also Anand, 2017;Lemanski, 2020), but also the obligations of those who govern.…”
Section: Governable Publics In Disciplinable Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This includes research that is attentive to local histories and everyday practices and processes that do not necessarily fit received concepts in urban studies, and often intersect with, supersede, or modify and situate processes of capitalist urbanization. Studies in this SI on urban electricity (Pilo', 2021), water (Kundu and Chatterjee, 2020;Alves, 2019;Schramm and Ibrahim, 2021;Truelove, 2021;Pihljak et al, 2021) and waste (Schindler et al, 2021) bring a situated approach to everyday urban governance, giving attention to local institutions, histories, diverse infrastructural configurations and multi-scalar power relations.…”
Section: Upe and Environmental And Infrastructural Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
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