2022
DOI: 10.1111/anti.12832
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The Spatial Politics of Infrastructure‐Led Development: Notes from an Asian Postcolony

Abstract: This essay introduces the Symposium on the spatial politics of infrastructure‐led development in Pakistan. It situates the Symposium (and the research site of Pakistan) with respect to the geographical literature on infrastructural politics more broadly, and the Belt and Road Initiative specifically. The essay also previews the seven contributing articles of the Symposium through a discussion of three cross‐cutting themes: securing the periphery, technologies of urban governance, and contested environments. Th… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…More generally, long-term reduction in watercourse channel capacity in these hydraulic systems due to sedimentation was also considered a key reason exacerbating those floods (Mustafa and Wrathall 2011). Beyond engineering problems or failures, there is also wider conversation taking place on whether Pakistan's ideological bias towards modernist engineering solutions (Akhter et al 2022) needs to be re-considered in favour of a more decolonial approach (Mustafa 2022).…”
Section: Water Management Along the Indus Deltamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More generally, long-term reduction in watercourse channel capacity in these hydraulic systems due to sedimentation was also considered a key reason exacerbating those floods (Mustafa and Wrathall 2011). Beyond engineering problems or failures, there is also wider conversation taking place on whether Pakistan's ideological bias towards modernist engineering solutions (Akhter et al 2022) needs to be re-considered in favour of a more decolonial approach (Mustafa 2022).…”
Section: Water Management Along the Indus Deltamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, colonial hydraulic infrastructure projects on the Indus River enabled resource extraction and expanded territorial rule, while connecting the colonial past to the present nation state in both Pakistan and India (Haines, 2014(Haines, , 2017. While rooted in colonial periods and logics, these types of projects transcend colonial and post-colonial periods and continue to be engines of modernity, as well as conflict (Akhter et al, 2022).…”
Section: Big Water Infrastructure As a Temporal Process Embedded In C...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Digital infrastructures provide states flexible techniques to undermine, threaten and sabotage resistance movements (Docot, 2021;Shires, 2021). Such authoritarian trends have likely been amplified in the wake of COVID-19 (Aidi, 2021;Shaheed & Greenacre, 2021), in tandem with an intensification of infrastructure-led, developmentalist ideology in postcolonial societies (Akhter et al, 2022). Authoritarian governance increasingly materializes through 'infrastructural modalities of power' (von Schnitzler, 2016, p. 12).…”
Section: Situating Digital Infrastructural Harm Within Authoritariani...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People speculated that these power outages also reflected the prioritization of public agribusiness contracts and the exporting of electricity to neighbouring countries for state profit (conversation with activists, Jimma, 2016). While immense infrastructural projects like hydroelectric dams are often touted as progress/modernization in ways used to legitimize and reinforce the power of the state (Mbembe & Roitman, 1995;Akhter et al, 2022), they frequently produce significant harms (Davies, 2021) including through displacement, ecocide, impoverishment, exacerbation of national indebtedness, inflation (Mains, 2012), and more. The routine proportion of electrical brown-and blackouts is similarly elevated in Cameroon (Chingwete et al, 2019).…”
Section: Digital Infrastructural Harm Within the Coloniality Of Infra...mentioning
confidence: 99%