Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

9-2024

Abstract

Whilst the idea of infrastructure has animated scholarship for the past twenty years at least, there remains a need for more expansive understandings of what infrastructure is, and what it can be. The speed, scale and material disruptiveness with which many of the infrastructural megaprojects that constitute China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) have been developed both underpin and validate this need. Whilst the effects of the BRI are both manifold and diffuse, all of them expose situations of infrastructural complexity. Rather than considering the BRI simply as the imposition of new material infrastructures on a landscape, we posit the value of recognising the BRI as an infrastructural layer that comes into contact, competition and collision with pre-existing infrastructural formations. The BRI is an infrastructural vortex that causes the “infrastructural commons” to come to the forefront of analysis. As a heuristic, the infrastructural commons captures the processes by which once shared resources and public or common goods become infrastructuralised in ways that bring about the (re)negotiation of meaning and value. These processes are acutely felt in South and Southeast Asia, where sedimented patterns of religion and belief shape the ways in which the BRI is engaged with and understood. Surprisingly, the sacred dimensions of these infrastructural commons remain unstudied, despite there being evidence to suggest that it is the transformative power of the sacred, rather than of secular modernity, that shapes and structures everyday lives. In this vein, the articles that constitute this special issue explore the sacred dimensions of the BRI’s infrastructural commons through a series of case studies from South and Southeast Asia.

Keywords

BRI, infrastructural commons, sacred, South Asia, Southeast Asia

Discipline

Asian Studies | Human Geography | Infrastructure

Research Areas

Integrative Research Areas

Areas of Excellence

Growth in Asia

Publication

Modern Asian Studies

Volume

58

Issue

5

First Page

1259

Last Page

1275

ISSN

0026-749X

Identifier

10.1017/S0026749X24000490

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X24000490

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