Creaky infrastructure

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    Abstract

    After conducting research in Shanghai and Kolkata it seems almost capricious to complain about Sydney traffic. Yet in this wealthy city of backyards and bays, waiting in road traffic bottlenecks has become a constitutive part of urban experience. The problem is not only that Sydney, like the cities of the American west, grew up around the internal combustion engine. Nor is it simply that population growth has exceeded the capacity of public and private agencies to provide transport infrastructure. Rather, the reluctance to invest in such infrastructure is a symptom of wider economic and social tendencies that have unfolded against the background of a general depoliticization of life. Rising debt, longer working hours, growing precarity and stress have all contributed to the rampant individualism and aggression that displays itself at Sydney's clogged intersections and gridlocked motorways. Little wonder then that logistics and traffic infrastructure have become major issues in this far-from-laid-back metropolis.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)27-30
    Number of pages4
    JournalTransit Labour: Circuits, Regions, Borders
    Volume5
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

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    Keywords

    • logistics
    • labor
    • transportation
    • Sydney (N.S.W.)

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