Connecting the Empire: New Research Perspectives on Infrastructures and the Environment in the (Post)Colonial World

Jonas van der Straeten, Ute Hasenöhrl

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26 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

In the academic debate on infrastructures in the Global South, there is a broad consensus that (post)colonial legacies present a major challenge for a transition towards more inclusive, sustainable and adapted modes of providing services. Yet, relatively little is known about the emergence and evolution of infrastructures in former colonies. Until a decade ago, most historical studies followed Daniel Headrick’s (1981) “tools of empire” thesis, painting—with broad brush strokes—a picture of infrastructures as instruments for advancing the colonial project of exploitation and subordination of non-European peoples and environments. This paper explores new research perspectives beyond this straightforward, ‘diffusionist’ perspective on technology transfer. In order to do so, it presents and discusses more recent studies which focus on interactive transfer processes as well as mechanisms of appropriation, and which increasingly combine approaches from imperial history, environmental history, and history of technology. There is much to gain from unpacking the changing motives and ideologies behind technology transfer; tracing the often contested and negotiated flows of ideas, technologies and knowledge within multilayered global networks; investigating the manifold ways in which infrastructures reflected and (re)produced colonial spaces and identities; critically reflecting on the utility of large (socio)technical systems (LTS) for the Global South; and approaching infrastructures in the (post)colonial world through entangled histories of technology and the environment. Following David Arnold’s (2005) plea for a “more interactive, culturally-nuanced, multi-sited debate” on technology in the non-Western world, the paper offers fresh insights for a broader debate about how infrastructures work within specific parameters of time, place and culture.

Originele taal-2Duits
Pagina's (van-tot)355-391
Aantal pagina's37
TijdschriftNTM Journal of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine
Volume24
Nummer van het tijdschrift4
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - dec. 2016
Extern gepubliceerdJa

Bibliografische nota

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, Springer International Publishing.

Trefwoorden

  • (Post)colonialism
  • Environment
  • Infrastructures
  • Literature review
  • Networks
  • Theory

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