Abstract

AbstractThe Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) in Kenya, inaugurated in 2017, has been promoted by the Kenyan government as a promise of “development” and “prospering people.” This paper demonstrates how, contrary to these narratives, the SGR reiterates the pre‐existing relations of difference mediated by class, geography, and ethnicity. Focusing on material and semiotic forms of the SGR infrastructures, it specifically shows how the railway project functions as the techno‐politics of differentiation that governs by including “prospering publics” of urban middle classes into Kenya's modernist development vision, providing unstable hopes for “development” to more precarious peri‐urban and rural “anticipating populations,” but simultaneously constituting “excluded populations” in rural landscapes that are denied the possibility of being a part of the national modernist development vision. Highlighting this intimate relationship between infrastructure, governance, and biopolitics, the paper demonstrates that mega‐infrastructures – differentiating between the publics included in, and the populations excluded from, the state's development visions and practices, as well as unstable subjective dispositions in‐between – engender modalities of non‐belonging that fall outside of (inherently liberal) frames of “citizenship” or a “public” frequently employed in critical infrastructure scholarship.

Highlights

  • On 1 June 2017 the Kenyan government celebrated the completion of Phase I of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) project

  • While complexities of each group merit further analytical attention in their own right, the paper provides these three lenses in order to highlight the techno-­politics of differentiation that infrastructure constitutes; this is intended to function as a critical reflection on the politics of mega-­infrastructures in Kenya and more broadly

  • In this paper, focusing on the semiotic and material forms of the SGR project in Kenya, I discussed how mega-­infrastructures function as the techno-p­ olitics of differentiation that governs national populations by relating them to state-l­ed development visions and practices in uneven, contradictory ways

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Summary

Introduction

On 1 June 2017 the Kenyan government celebrated the completion of Phase I of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) project.

Results
Conclusion

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