Infrastructures are both relational and ecological, visible and invisible. They’ve been described as most apparent upon breaking, as ubiquitous as the “ambient conditions of life,” and as “matter that moves other matter,” forming the anatomical structures for everyday life (Star 1999; Anand, Gupta, Appel 2018; Larkin 2013).
Digital infrastructures take on all of these incongruous qualities as they interact with the built, natural, and social environments. Physical elements of digital infrastructures often distribute harms to vulnerable communities while centralizing the benefits to companies and communities in the Global North (Chachra 2021; Livingstone 2024; Masood and Bhattacharya 2024). These infrastructures have become a key tension point around the globe, seeding land disputes, climate effects, and disrupting social fabrics. They can create networks of extraction and harm along global supply chains: from broadband infrastructure, to data centers, to undersea cables, and semiconductor production facilities, digital infrastructures shift the geopolitical, racial, and socioeconomic ecosystems in the places they take root. At the same time, robust social infrastructures have grown to resist, refute, play upon, and take on these digital and physical infrastructures — creating even more complex webs of engagement.
While these infrastructures impose physical, material, and social consequences, they are also intertwined with myths of progress, transformation, and speculation. Companies and communities alike craft stories about how digital infrastructures enter, transform, and abandon cities, towns, and villages around the world. Policymakers lean on infrastructure investments as harbingers of economic transformation, positioning companies as job creators that signal positive change.
Calling upon this complexity, this workshop seeks to share, craft, spin, and uncover stories of community engagement, resistance, clash, and surprising encounters with digital infrastructures. What myths, theories, and speculations are communities crafting about new digital infrastructures, and who is telling these stories? What stories do these social and digital concepts tell and conceal? How are digital infrastructures showing up in unexpected ways in everyday life? What do these infrastructures take from communities, and how do people resist and respond? What kinds of resistance to technological infrastructures tip the scale, breaking or engendering trust?