2020
DOI: 10.1111/1469-8676.12963
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Promising pipelines and hydrocarbon nationalism: the sociality of unbuilt infrastructure in indigenous Siberia

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Recently, anthropology has adopted this quest to make the sociopolitical impact of infrastructures on ordinary people visible (Larkin 2013). By zooming in on the effects of physical infrastructure such as radio transmitters (Larkin 2008), pipelines (Plets 2020) and roads (Harvey and Knox 2012) on people's actions and subjectivities, anthropology has triggered a broader interest in the humanities and social sciences on the social effects of infrastructure beyond the walls of the laboratory and technology park.…”
Section: Towards Digital Infrastructure Literacy: Platforms and The G...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, anthropology has adopted this quest to make the sociopolitical impact of infrastructures on ordinary people visible (Larkin 2013). By zooming in on the effects of physical infrastructure such as radio transmitters (Larkin 2008), pipelines (Plets 2020) and roads (Harvey and Knox 2012) on people's actions and subjectivities, anthropology has triggered a broader interest in the humanities and social sciences on the social effects of infrastructure beyond the walls of the laboratory and technology park.…”
Section: Towards Digital Infrastructure Literacy: Platforms and The G...mentioning
confidence: 99%