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This book offers a multidisciplinary insight into the significance of infrastructural change for global orders. While infrastructures form the material basis of our everyday lives and their design and use determine the further development of our societies, infrastructures themselves often remain invisible in everyday life. Although they are and have always been subject to political conflicts their contestation often only becomes visible when the circulation of data, goods and people is disrupted. Rarely has this been more evident than at the moment, when we are experiencing a multitude of overlapping global crises. The threat of the nearing climate catastrophe shows us the inadequacies and climatic impacts of our energy and transport systems. The Russian war of aggression in Ukraine and the subsequent energy crisis underline how dependent we are on infrastructures and how their political instrumentalization contributes to the escalation of conflicts. The COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed the vulnerability not only of national infrastructures but also of global supply chains. These crises illustrate twofold: first they show that transnational infrastructures are no longer only deepening ties between individuals, societies, and states. This was for long the hope of transnational actors. Infrastructures may still stabilize global orders, but they also foster their reconfiguration, facilitating the establishment and rise of certain political actors and the decline of others. Second, these crises force us to ask about the significance of transformed infrastructures for global orders; how this transformation manifested itself historically and how it is shaping the present and future alike. What can a comprehensive understanding of the impact of infrastructures on global orders contribute to the challenges of the 21st century? With this anthology we approach this question from different perspectives. The book deals with infrastructures in different fields from energy to transport, from communication to migration and at different levels of society local, regional, global. What unites all the contributions is an interest in showing what the respective dynamics within and among these fields as well as the driving forces behind these developments mean for our society. This book is aimed at a wide audience from infrastructure researchers to IR experts as well as from colleagues with expertise in specific policy fields to the general reader interested in the effects often invisible transnational infrastructures have on the organization of their everyday life.
This book provides a multidisciplinary insight into the effects transnational infrastructures have on global orders. The articles in this book cover a diverse range of infrastructures, such as energy, transport, and communication. Readers can expect an informed debate on how the contestation of infrastructural transformation shapes everyday life.
Auteur
Hans-Jürgen Bieling is Professor for Political Economy at the Institute of Political Science in Tübingen.
Thomas Diez is Professor of Political Science and International Relations at the Institute of Political Science in Tübingen.
Riccarda Flemmer is Junior Professor for "Political Struggles in the Global South" of the Global Encounters Platform at the Institute of Political Science in Tübingen.
Andrea Futterer is a research associate at the Institute of Political Science in Tübingen.
Contenu
Introduction: Transnational Infrastructures and Global Order(s).- Infrastructural Development and the Ordering of International Society.- Capitalism and Infrastructural Ordering: (Re)Crafting of Statehood and Territorial Power.- Infrastructure Conflicts in a New Geoeconomic Order a Political Economy Perspective.- Dimensions of Infrastructures and the Digital Transformation of the Public Sphere.- Infrastructural Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence On the Implications of AI Infrastructures for Global (In)Justice.- The Ambivalence of Infrastructures: The Complex Interplay of Development and Conservation in the Garhwal Himalayas.- The Political Economy of Transport Infrastructure and Energy Crisis: A Regional Study in 19th Century Germany.- Open Veins or Lifelines of Society? Infrastructures and the Order of Global Resource Extractivism in Latin America.- Blue-Green Infrastructure as an Innovative Approach to Sustainable Development.- Landscape Conflicts within Germany's Energy Transition.- Outer Space Infrastructures and Global Order: How the Control Over Satellite Constellations Reshapes State-Business Relations.- Spaces and Scales of a Street: Shifting Social Orders and Urban Transformation, as Seen From Marseille.- Infrastructures of Migration Regulation: Policing Migrant Illegality and Deportation in India.