Paths of authority, roads of resistance: Ambiguous rural infrastructure and slippery stabilization in eastern DR Congo

  • Peer Schouten
  • , Judith Verweijen
  • , Saidi Kubuya Batundi
  • , Janvier Murairi

Research output: Articles: Journal and NewspaperJournal ArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

This article uses the concept of the ‘infrastructural frontier’ to trace the linkages between externally financed road building projects and the constitution of eastern DR Congo as a liminal political space at the material edge of the state. This frontier space has two core features: first, the patchy quality of its road infrastructure, which is perpetually rebuilt only to disintegrate again. Second, the transient nature of configurations of authority and control, leading to ‘circulation struggles’ along roads that are never fully functional. These features contribute to the collapse of a clear-cut dichotomy between the presence and the absence of transport infrastructure, but also between spaces of control and spaces of resistance. The constitution of eastern Congo as an infrastructural frontier, we argue, is importantly related to its ‘subversive soils’, whose clayish, sticky substance accelerates road degradation and compounds power projection. The resulting patchiness of both durable road infrastructure and central state control generates a ‘frontier effect’: it invites perpetual external donor interventions to build roads, but these projects never fundamentally upend the infrastructural and political state of affairs. In fact, as we demonstrate, these projects have become crucial to its very constitution. These observations point to the dual temporality of eastern Congo’s ‘perpetual’ infrastructural frontier, where the short-term volatility of circulation struggles is both a product of and reproduces its frontier-ness over the longue durée. Our contribution thus demonstrates the intricate relations between the temporal, material and political qualities of frontier spaces.
Original languageEnglish
JournalGeoforum
ISSN0016-7185
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Oct 2021
EventPolitical ecologies of state-building: Intervention and resistance at the infrastructural edges of Empire - DIIS Auditorium, Copenhagen, Denmark
Duration: 27 Feb 202027 Feb 2020
https://www.diis.dk/en/node/15240

Seminar

SeminarPolitical ecologies of state-building
LocationDIIS Auditorium
Country/TerritoryDenmark
CityCopenhagen
Period27/02/202027/02/2020
SponsorDanish Institute for International Studies, University of Gothenburg, London School of Economics, Yale University, McGill University
Internet address

Keywords

  • Infrastructure
  • Congo, Democratic Republic of the
  • Roads
  • Stabilization
  • State building
  • Development aid policy
  • political ecology
  • Political economy
  • Resistance

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