
This book review assesses Deb Chachra’s How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World as an interdisciplinary and accessible examination of infrastructure as a social, political, and moral system rather than a purely technical one. The review highlights Chachra’s core argument that infrastructure shapes human agency by enabling and constraining everyday life while reflecting societal values, power relations, and historical inequalities. It emphasizes the book’s relevance for public administration and governance, particularly in understanding infrastructure as a site of public value creation, equity, accountability, and long-term collective responsibility. The review also underscores Chachra’s concept of infrastructure literacy, which encourages readers to recognize the often-invisible systems and labor that sustain modern life. While the book offers limited institutional or comparative governance analysis, this choice enhances its clarity and broad appeal. Overall, the review positions How Infrastructure Works as a valuable resource for scholars, practitioners, and students interested in infrastructure governance, social equity, and the ethics of the built environment.
Infrastructure literacy, Public value, Equity and equality, Infrastructure governance, Human agency
Infrastructure literacy, Public value, Equity and equality, Infrastructure governance, Human agency
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