This book explores how the management science of logistics changes working lives and contributes to the making of world regions. With a focus on the port of Kolkata and changing patterns of Asian regionalism, the volume examines how logistics entwine with political power, historical forces, labour movements, and new technologies. The contributors ask how logistical practices reconfigure both Asias relation to the world and its internal logic of transport and communication. Building on critical perspectives that understand logistics as a political technology for producing and organizing space and power, Logistical Asia tracks how digital technologies and material infrastructure combine to remake urban and regional territories and produce new forms of governance and subjectivity.
1. Making Logistical Worlds
Part I Port as Infrastructure of Postcolonial Capitalism
2. The Port of Calcutta in the Imperial Network of South and South-East Asia, 1870s-1950s
3. Spatialization of Calculability, Financialization of Space: A Study of the Kolkata Port
4. Ports and Crime
5. Haldia: Logistics and Its Other(s)
6. Kolkata Port: Challenges of Geopolitics and Globalization
Part II Logistics of Asia-Led Globalization
7. The Importance of Being Siliguri: Border Effect and the Untimely City in North Bengal
8. Piraeus Port as a Machinic Assemblage: Labour, Precarity and Struggles
9. Asias Era of Infrastructure and the Politics of Corridors: Decoding the Language of Logistical Governance
10. Logistics of the Accident: E-waste Management in Hong Kong
11. Geopolitics of the Belt and Road: Space, State, and Capital in ls£