Ebook: Assembling Policy: Transantiago, Human Devices, and the Dream of a World-Class Society
Author: Sebastián Ureta
- Tags: Mass Transit, Transportation, Engineering & Transportation, Social Policy, Public Affairs & Policy, Politics & Government, Politics & Social Sciences
- Series: Infrastructures
- Year: 2015
- Publisher: The MIT Press
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
Ureta examines Transantiago as a policy assemblage formed by an array of heterogeneous elements — including, crucially, "human devices," or artifacts and practices through which humans were brought into infrastructure planning and implementation. Ureta traces the design and operation of Transantiago through four configurations: crisis, infrastructuration, disruption, and normalization. In the crisis phase, humans were enacted both as consumers and as participants in the transformation of Santiago into a "world-class" city, but during infrastructuration the "active citizen" went missing. The launch of Transantiago caused huge disruptions, in part because users challenged their role as mere consumers and instead enacted unexpected human devices. Resisting calls for radical reform, policymakers insisted on normalizing Transantiago, transforming it into a permanent failing system. Drawing on Chile's experience, Ureta argues that if we understand policy as a series of heterogeneous assemblages, infrastructure policymaking would be more inclusive, reflexive, and responsible.