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11 - Desynchronized Infrastructures of Care: Suburban Imaginaries Re-Examined

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2024

Jean-Paul D. Addie
Affiliation:
Georgia State University
Michael R. Glass
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
Jen Nelles
Affiliation:
Oxford Brookes University
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Summary

Introduction: Time and infrastructure in the sick suburbs

This chapter examines the temporalities of infrastructure at the intersection of health, disease, and urbanization, especially peripheral, or extended, urbanization. At the start of 2020, we were set to study the life of people living with dementia (PLWD) in Toronto's immigrant suburbs. However, when the COVID-19 pandemic made that research temporarily impossible, we pivoted in our collaboration to the effect of COVID-19 on the urban peripheries of Toronto and Milan (Biglieri et al, 2020). This chapter draws from these two disparate research themes to present a rearticulation of our thinking around the ‘forever time’ that PLWD in suburbs may feel, and the presentism and ad hocism of the pandemic response. To make the connection between people experiencing the chronic, degenerative condition of dementia with those that suffered acute infection from COVID-19, we look at the suburban landscape of care in the Toronto region through a lens of infrastructural temporality.

Our analysis engages the theoretically distinct but intrinsically linked perspectives of understanding infrastructure through a temporal analytic and seeing time itself as an infrastructure. Although neither approach is new per se, we argue that reading across them allows us to examine inequalities across both time and space and to understand the massive differences in how socially constructed times influence and condition the way infrastructures ‘materialize’ (Besedovsky et al, 2019; Coutard, this volume). In this chapter, we deploy a temporal analytic to examine how (sub)urban inequalities are created and perpetuated, especially for marginalized populations. Accentuating the temporal exposes structural inequities in regional infrastructures that are often hidden through performative and repetitive political discourses and processes that assign stereotypical roles and expectations to such places as inner cities and suburbs and the actors that inhabit them. Suburban landscapes, for instance, are often seen as lacking in ability to adapt to climate change and other systemic challenges but tend to remain both extensively burdened with infrastructure (from airports to waste dumps) and perpetually infrastructurally ill-equipped to deal with the growing ‘urban’ problematiques posed by suburban maturation and change.

Type
Chapter
Information
Infrastructural Times
Temporality and the Making of Global Urban Worlds
, pp. 227 - 248
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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