1st Edition

The Globalization of American Infrastructure The Shipping Container and Freight Transportation

By Matthew Heins Copyright 2016
232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

This book gives an account of how the U.S. freight transportation system has been impacted and “globalized,” since the 1950s, by the presence of the shipping container. A globally standardized object, the container carries cargo moving in international trade, and it utilizes and fits within the existing transportation infrastructures of shipping, trucking and railroads. In this way it binds them... Read more

1. Introduction  2. The Rise of the Shipping Container  3. Containerization as Infrastructure  4. Globalizing the Infrastructure of the Nation-State  5. The Reluctant Railroads  6. Trucking Gets On Board  7. The Changing Railroads  8. Trucking Finds Its Place  9. Sites of Transfer  10. Slow Going on the Inland Waterways  11. Conclusion 

Biography

Matthew Heins is an independent scholar, and works in urban planning. He gained his PhD degree from the University of Michigan, and has been a faculty member at Rhode Island School of Design, Northeastern University and Wayne State University.

"Throughout, Heins’s goal is to unpack how freight shipping is a product of the multilayered political, social, and economic contexts through which goods move. Shipping does not run over territories, but through them in mutually affecting ways. In doing so, the author usefully displaces the focus on the shipping container as a singular technological invention, instead placing it within the systems that make it possible. The book succeeds in highlighting the continuities between precontainerization and widespread adoption, as opposed to reproducing a narrative of radical departure […] This book joins the ranks of critical accounts of logistics production, disrupting the narrative of smooth, seamless flows that are rooted in technical precision. It will be of interest to those who seek nuanced accounts of the change wrought by globalization. Heins pushes back against accounts of globalization in which so-called progress comes inevitably to local and national scales by other macro forces and instead unpacks the complex, multiscalar dimensions of power and agency… He shows that infrastructure change is path-dependent and that the ways that globalization touches down in particular places are shaped by dynamic and sometimes unforeseen political, economic, and social histories."

— Beth Gutelius, Transfers: Interdisciplinary Journal of Mobility Studies

"…a highly readable and informative history […] This is a timely book which opens an important window for historians of transport and mobility. Given containerisation’s impact internationally, historians should be encouraged to use Heins’s notions to explore and extend these and similar arguments in the contexts of other nation states, as well as political and trading groupings of states."

— Keith Harcourt, The Journal of Transport History

"…this is a useful and informative addition to the literature, which d