Show
270 citations
related to Infrastructure
Show
270 citations
related to Infrastructure as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Book
Michael Degani
(October 2023)
The city electric: infrastructure and ingenuity in postsocialist Tanzania.
(/isis/citation/CBB047203108/)
Article
Laura Lambert
(2023)
Contested promises: Migrants’ material politics vis-à-vis the humanitarian border in Niger.
Science as Culture
(pp. 363-386).
(/isis/citation/CBB085788037/)
Article
Fatima K. Espinoza Vasquez
(2023)
Working at the Seams of Colonial Structures: Alternative Sociotechnical Infrastructures Revealed by Hurricane Maria.
Science, Technology and Human Values
(pp. 374-400).
(/isis/citation/CBB231267644/)
Article
Kregg Hetherington; Elie Jalbert
(2023)
The Big Flush of Montreal: On affective maintenance and infrastructural events.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 102-120).
(/isis/citation/CBB288892399/)
Article
John Cropper
(2023)
”The sparrow loves millet, but labors not”: Energy use and infrastructure in the Senegal Valley, 1450-1760.
History and Technology
(pp. 42-64).
(/isis/citation/CBB700387617/)
Article
Daniel Pérez-Zapico
(2023)
Electrical futures for a regenerated Spain: Electricity, engineering and national reconstruction after the 1898 ‘Disaster’.
History and Technology
(pp. 91-125).
(/isis/citation/CBB556215442/)
Article
Yuqing Zhu
(2023)
Railroad investment and regional disparity: Public expenditure on transport infrastructure in France, 1837–57.
The Journal of Transport History
(pp. 99-124).
(/isis/citation/CBB933809511/)
Article
Kjell David Ericson
(2023)
The Puzzle of the Thinly Coated Pearl: Aquacultural Ecology and the Politics of Density in Ago Bay.
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
(pp. 256-277).
(/isis/citation/CBB823336687/)
Article
Shehab Ismail
(2023)
The Engineer as Economist: Sewers and the Making of the Water Consumer in Colonial Cairo, 1890.
Technology and Culture
(pp. 434-455).
(/isis/citation/CBB727906214/)
Article
Benjamin B. Cohen
(2023)
“The water flows under the bridge and we pass above it …” infrastructure, transport and state power: The bridges of Hyderabad city, India c. sixteenth to twentieth centuries.
The Journal of Transport History
(pp. 27-49).
(/isis/citation/CBB788833794/)
Article
Daniel Greene
(2022)
Landlords of the internet: Big data and big real estate.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 904-927).
(/isis/citation/CBB116395527/)
Book
Joseph Heathcott; Jonathan Soffer; Rae Zimmerman
(2022)
Urban Infrastructure: Historical and Social Dimensions of an Interconnected World.
(/isis/citation/CBB623418452/)
Book
Ian Derbyshire
(2022)
Railways' Economic Impact on Uttar Pradesh and Colonial North India (1860-1914): The Iron Raj.
(/isis/citation/CBB740471115/)
Article
Katherine Chandler
(2022)
Apartheid drone: Infrastructures of militarism and the hidden genealogies of the South African Seeker.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 512-535).
(/isis/citation/CBB611340328/)
Article
Kira J. Schmidt; Maria Buck
(2022)
Special Section: Technical Infrastructures, Transnational Protest Movements and the Use of Counter-Expertise.
NTM: Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Technik und Medizin.
(/isis/citation/CBB712752534/)
Article
Jens Ivo Engels
(July 2022)
Rhythm Analysis: A Heuristic Tool for Historical Infrastructure Research.
Technology and Culture
(pp. 830-852).
(/isis/citation/CBB181771307/)
Article
Jonathan English
(June 2022)
Getting Off Track: the Northeast Corridor Improvement Project in an International Context.
The Journal of Transport History
(pp. 107-130).
(/isis/citation/CBB445982889/)
Book
E. Cram
(2022)
Violent Inheritance: Sexuality, Land, and Energy in Making the North American West.
(/isis/citation/CBB136289783/)
Article
Casper Bruun Jensen
(2022)
Emerging Potentials: Times and Climes of the Belt and Road Initiative in Cambodia and Beyond.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
(pp. 206-229).
(/isis/citation/CBB553812676/)
Book
Daniel Jordan Smith
(2022)
Every Household Its Own Government: Improvised Infrastructure, Entrepreneurial Citizens, and the State in Nigeria.
(/isis/citation/CBB663829322/)
Be the first to comment!