Skip to Content

Search: {{$root.lsaSearchQuery.q}}, Page {{$root.page}}

The African Studies Center (ASC) sponsors conferences, lectures, exhibits, film series, and cultural performances throughout the year. These events are designed to foster understanding of Africa among members of the U-M community and the public  and to advance the exchange of resources and knowledge between U-M and its partners in Africa.

In addition to our yearly programming, ASC considers funding requests to cosponsor lectures, events, performances,  and activities that coincide with the our mission to promote a broad and deep understanding of the region. Request to cosponsor an event»

STS Speaker Series. Power, Responsibility, and Reliability in the Electrical World

Veronica Jacome, Temple University
Monday, March 6, 2023
4:00-5:30 PM
1014 Tisch Hall Map
Within contemporary electrification efforts in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) a common policy narrative is that unequal and unreliable grid services are partially the fault of electricity users themselves. SSA residents are often characterized as “thieves,” “non-payers,” and “entitled,” whose behavior culminates in “nontechnical losses” that in turn cripples utilities’ effort to offer them better services. But the link between these so-called problematic users and their problematic systems is rarely empirically justified.

In this talk, I turn to the history of electrical power, reliability, and responsibility in the first fifty years of US electrification to explore how ideas of delinquents, nonpayers, and thieves have evolved in the context of increasing reliability. I ask, what does the history of these moralized subjects and attendant material conditions – those blamed for breakdowns/those held responsible – reveal about assumptions being made today?

This research and its implications are part of a broader effort to reflect on the tension between an idealized benchmark for access, the ever-present connection, and the kind that might in fact be feasible as access scales up in the context of humanitarianism and environmentalism. The talk explores multiple cycles of service expectations and reliability, scale-up and expansion, (non)payment and low investment, and normalizations and moralizations with framing concepts from STS and postcolonial development.

Co-sponsors: Department of Afroamerican and African Studies; Program in Science, Technology & Public Policy; African Studies Center
Building: Tisch Hall
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: african and african american studies, Geopolitics, Information and Technology, Political Economy, Science, Technology, And Society Program
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Science, Technology & Society, Science, Technology, and Public Policy (STPP) Program, Department of Afroamerican and African Studies, African Studies Center