Infrastructure
English


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About The Book

<p>This book provides an overview and assessment of infrastructure’s legal and governance underpinnings. </p><p>Infrastructure is often thought of as a term referring only to the physical entities – pipes cables utility poles highways airports – that facilitate the transmission of water gas telecommunications and electricity as well as enabling both private and public transportation and serving to house more or less public services such as health care and schools. However infrastructure planning and implementation are not reducible to bricks and mortar. The complex process requires drawing from and sometimes re-inventing or recycling legal tools from construction contracts to financing ‘deals’ which are often taken for granted by both practitioners and urban studies scholars. These are as important today as they were when the first railway lines were built and to a large extent they remain just as invisible: the avalanche of drawings and photographs of planned or in-process fancy buildings tends to hide from view the behind- the-scenes negotiations and decision-making that had to happen before construction could start and which in some cases continue afterwards. This book does not ignore the material and nonhuman aspects of infrastructure. But focusing on the legal and governance underpinnings of infrastructure projects via a series of key terms that refer to hybrid legal processes the book offers an important socio-legal supplement to the current ‘infrastructure turn’. </p><p>This book will be of interest to students in the areas of socio-legal studies urban sociology urban studies urban geography planning public law and contract law as well as practitioners involved in infrastructure projects.</p>
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