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  5. Measuring progress in megawatt: Colonialism, development, and the "unseeing" electricity grid in East Africa
 
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2021
Zweitveröffentlichung
Artikel
Verlagsversion

Measuring progress in megawatt: Colonialism, development, and the "unseeing" electricity grid in East Africa

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Hauptpublikation
CNT_CNT12415.pdf
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International
Format: Adobe PDF
Size: 2.55 MB
TUDa URI
tuda/8452
URN
urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-210086
DOI
10.26083/tuprints-00021008
Autor:innen
Straeten, Jonas van der ORCID 0000-0002-6072-9376
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)

The electrification of East Africa followed an exceptionally uneven path. After about 50 years of relative neglect under colonial rule, the construction of hydroelectric dams moved electricity generation into the focus of late colonial development policy and became the major field of intervention for foreign donors after independence. The metrics of electricity attained a role as indicator and driver for economic growth, and therefore as a target figure in economic policy, one that was arguably not justified by their actual significance in the energy landscape of East Africa. This paper analyses both the global preconditions of this shift and its local repercussions. Rather than the physical visibility of electricity in the form of large dams and high‐tension lines, the paper focuses on the processes that rendered electricity ontologically visible. It traces attempts by engineers, expert advisors, or development consultants to translate the complex information associated with the generation and consumption of electricity into calculable and comparable metrics. The paper scrutinises these commensuration processes in terms of the resources and knowledge they required, the frameworks of agency they opened, and the way they fed into wider discourses of development. It asks how the metrics of electricity themselves became part of the colonial and postcolonial politics of calculation, as they increasingly came to be seen as a medium for conceiving national economies. This trend was reinforced by the ascent of development economics in the 1950s and its influence on the ontological foundations of international development cooperation and post‐independence nation‐building. Because of the calculability and capital‐intensity of its production, electricity lent itself perfectly to an economic policy based on macroeconomic aggregates and abstract growth models. Conversely, the electricity bias of international development agencies and the national government rendered rural, non‐commercial, and non‐productive energy use largely invisible.

Freie Schlagworte

Africa

colonialism

commensuration

development

electricity

Sprache
Englisch
Fachbereich/-gebiet
02 Fachbereich Gesellschafts- und Geschichtswissenschaften > Institut für Geschichte > Technikgeschichte
DDC
600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften > 621.3 Elektrotechnik, Elektronik
900 Geschichte und Geografie > 960 Geschichte Afrikas
Institution
Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt
Ort
Darmstadt
Titel der Zeitschrift / Schriftenreihe
Centaurus
Startseite
651
Endseite
674
Jahrgang der Zeitschrift
63
Heftnummer der Zeitschrift
4
ISSN
1600-0498
Verlag
John Wiley & Sons
Ort der Erstveröffentlichung
Oxford
Publikationsjahr der Erstveröffentlichung
2021
Verlags-DOI
10.1111/1600-0498.12415
PPN
515636991
Zusätzliche Infomationen
Special Issue: Making power visible. Codifications, infrastructures, and representations of energy

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