Theory

Extrastatecraft / Infrastructure Space

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Easterling's account of 'infrastructure space' — the hidden rules of zones, standards and platforms — as a new medium of polity.

Infrastructure Power Exchange

Details

Introduced
2014

Classifications

Holder
Individual
Source of authority
Observation
Subject
Human centred
Political position
Hegemonic
Mode of transmission
Text drawing
Knowledge type
Propositional
Epistemic cluster
Western philosophical

Referenced by

Sources

  1. Verso / author. n.d.. https://www.kellereasterling.com/books/extrastatecraft-the-power-of-infrastructure-space.
  2. Easterling, Keller. Extrastatecraft: The Power of Infrastructure Space. Verso, 2014.

Cite this entry

First published May 2026Last revised Jul 2026

CLAD. "Extrastatecraft / Infrastructure Space." Atlas of Architectural Thought. CLAD, 2026. https://www.cl-ad.com.au/research/atlas/theory/extrastatecraft/. Accessed July 17, 2026.