4.6 Article

Infrastructure-led development and the peri-urban question: Furthering crossover comparisons

Journal

URBAN STUDIES
Volume 59, Issue 8, Pages 1597-1617

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/00420980211064158

Keywords

comparative urbanism; East Africa; geographies of precarity; Latin America; planetary urbanisation

Funding

  1. Economic and Social Research Council (UK) [ES/R01096X/1]
  2. Colombian Ministry for Science, Technology and Innovation, Fondo Nacional de Financiamiento para la Ciencia, la Tecnologia y la Innovacion Francisco Jose de Caldas [791-2017, 276-2018]
  3. ESRC [ES/R01096X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Contemporary development policy emphasizes the importance of enhanced connectivity for fostering economic growth in lagging regions, resulting in the proliferation of new urban spaces. However, these urban spaces are often overlooked by projects centered on large-scale connective infrastructures. This paper aims to reconcile political economy analyses with situated studies to provide a comprehensive understanding of infrastructure-led development.
Contemporary development policy portrays enhanced connectivity as the key to fostering economic growth in lagging regions. This global policy consensus and consequent infrastructure scramble have resulted in a proliferation of new urban spaces. These are dispersed, fragmentary and often unrecognised as urban by projects and plans centred on large-scale connective infrastructures to integrate remote regions into circuits of capital. Whilst our understanding of infrastructure-led development is informed by critical engagements with planetary urbanisation, global infrastructure and logistics, this position paper seeks to reconcile political economy analyses with situated studies closer to lived forms of heterogeneous precariousness in emerging urban worlds. Addressing recent debates that frame these bodies of scholarship as antagonistic, we emphasise the supplementarity of perspectives from within and beyond urban studies. This pluralism can be practised through comparisons that will (i) trace the geo-economic relationality of mega-infrastructures, which conditions directly and indirectly their planning, financing, construction and management, and (simultaneously or independently) (ii) examine difference in the diverse experiences of and responses to emergent infrastructural urbanisms of precarity. The article shows that genetic and generative comparisons can inform a research agenda on (peri-)urban precariousness, engaging policies with unmistakable global moorings but complex multi-scalar politics, diverging outcomes and situated resistances and appropriations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available