
Collection no. 013: Toxic Infrastructures
Spring 2025
For decades, infrastructures have been widely seen as the backbone of modernity, a symbol of progress and development, and a manifestation of socio-technical imaginaries and futures. But in the current historical moment, these futures have become increasingly toxic. Not only are infrastructures involved in domesticating, enabling, and mediating toxic flows (Dewan and Sibilia 2023) as part of their regular operating cycles, but they also constitute contaminants themselves as they often consist of toxic materials and heavily treated substances. In this sense, while the purpose of infrastructures is to mitigate risk, they also paradoxically introduce new risks (Howe et al. 2016: 548) in ways that transform “the materials of modernity” into “instruments of slow violence” (Hecht 2018: 130).
This “infrastructural violence” (Rodgers and O’Neill 2012), a result of infrastructures’ turning against themselves and against their intended purposes, must be understood as “planned” (Boehmner and Davies 2018) and indeed inherent to “late industrialism” (Fortun 2012), rather than arising from accidental failure, as an emphasis across the literature on disasters would suggest. Neglect, deferred maintenance, neoliberal cost-saving measures, political (non-)decisions, and lack of accountability, among other factors, all reshape infrastructures in ways that make nuclear disasters, toxic spills, and water crises possible. Infrastructures mobilise elements, molecules, and substances, thereby co-producing toxicity and contamination that are in turn fixed incrementally through the adding of infrastructural layers.
Despite a significant body of work examining the socio-ecological damage produced by the workings of complex infrastructural systems, the concept of toxic infrastructures remains undertheorised. And yet, thanks to their centrality and ubiquity in everyday life around the globe, we believe that infrastructures provide a unique lens through which to capture the workings and effects of late industrialism over different scales and “toxic timescapes” (Müller and Ohman Nielsen 2023). This collection on toxic infrastructures thus aims to grasp the entangled, dynamic, yet quotidian relationship between toxicity and infrastructures and the highly complex and multiscalar daily workings that render infrastructures toxic.
This edited collection exposes new ontological and epistemological frameworks for situating and understanding the deleterious role of infrastructures in late industrialism. The articles below tackle the intimate relationship between toxicity and infrastructures, empirically grounding and considering the political, economic, and cultural relations that create and sustain toxic infrastructures across extended spaces and durations.
Edited by Nikolaos Olma and Janine Hauer
Subscribe to our publication alert and follow us on social media!

Toxic Infrastructures: An Introduction
Nikolaos Olma and Janine Hauer argue that toxic infrastructures provide a unique lens through which to capture the workings and effects of late industrialism across scales and temporalities.

Breaking Points: Mediated Contaminations, Infrastructural Toxicity
Andrea Bordoli examines mining-linked water contamination in Indigenous lands in Canada and proposes infrastructural toxicity as a lens to address settler-colonial violence.

Remediating Trails: Addressing Toxicities from Pitchblende Transportation
Laura Goyhenex links historical uranium ore spills on Indigenous land in Canada’s Northwest Territories to both toxic contamination and colonial power relations.

Wounded Landscape: Ambivalence and Toxic Extractivism in Indonesia
Fahmi Rizki Fahroji explores how a coal company’s seizure of rubber plantations in Indonesia has pushed farmers into toxic, low-paying jobs in the mining industry.

Seeking Environmental Justice Amid Post-Industrial Ruins
Gulzat Baialieva considers how 80 tons of abandoned toxic waste in Kyrgyzstan trigger discussions on the toxic aftermath of neoliberal reforms and state neglect.

Toxic Struggles: Asbestos in Argentina’s Subway
Jorge Afarian reveals how Buenos Aires metro workers face illegal asbestos exposure and uncovers a troubling hierarchy between acceptable and unacceptable health risks.

Silica Trails: Turned Soils, Dusty Lungs
Juliana Ramos Boldrin illustrates how silica exposure can damage health, but mitigating the harm could jeopardise Brazil’s dominance in silica export.

Repairing Toxic: Deferred Maintenance in Schools
Margaret Tebbe and Fred Ariel Hernandez suggest how late-industrial ethnography can make visible some of the toxic hazards in Los Angeles school buildings.

Toxic Recurrences
Kaitlyn Rabach demonstrates that crumbling homes and toxic mould go unacknowledged in County Donegal, Ireland, as residents fear speaking out will devalue their property.

Ammonia Synthesis: Entering a Ubiquitous Chemical Technosphere
Benjamin Steininger rethinks ammonia synthesis and follows its specific associated toxicities, putting particular emphasis on the ‘openness’ of industrial infrastructure.

Complete Roadsides Collection no. 013 in high resolution (6.7 MB)
Complete Roadsides Collection no. 013 in low resolution (2.5 MB)