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Anne Beaulieu’s Infrastructure Manifest: Anne Beaulieu’s Infrastructure Manifest

Anne Beaulieu’s Infrastructure Manifest
Anne Beaulieu’s Infrastructure Manifest
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Infrastructure Manifest (v. 1.0) - Anne Beaulieu - Chapter 1 - “Interfaces for the Anthropocene”
Infrastructure TypeDescriptionaControl point for access to or use (e.g., identify the owner, regulator, manager, etc. as appropriate)bOpen Source, Open Access, or Public Resource/UtilitycProprietarycHow heavily used?dReliabilitydSatisfaction for UserdEthical concerns (known or possible)Comments
Land infrastructure (e.g., properties ceded, unceded, public, private, etc.) Include only principal land infrastructures.Country: The NetherlandsIdentity of the owner and position in key relationships enabling the gaining of citizenship (kinship, employment, status as resident never arrested nor convincted of offense)Not ApplicableYes10108Privileges of mobility afforded to holders of Dutch passports are significant
Materials infrastructure (e.g., notable common or rare extracted or other materials used in research, production, and communication). Break down by notable materials used in devices or tools if appropriate.There are issues of material resources used to produce the tools of our work. Clearly, extractions issues are deserving of attention. In addition, there are material impacts of the circulation and transport of these materials, as materials need to be sourced, refined and shipped. There are also associated issues of pollution and toxicity, connected to the afterlife of material infrastructures. Laptop and phone most likely contain heavy metals like cadmium, antimony, and lead, and plastic casing often contains flame retardants. These are all potentially harmful if not disposed of well—and it seems that most ewaste is not dealt with in ways that might avoid or minimize toxic effects, since less than 20% according to the World Health Organization: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/electronic-waste-(e-waste)Regulatory bodies have an important role to play both in regulating resource extraction and disposal, but also in enforcing principles of reparability and fighting planned obsolecence and inability to replace batteries. Universities could also decide to source their equipment ethically and seek to support more 'circula’ approaches to the equipment they buy (my institution is exploring this with regard to office furniture). Not ApplicableYes10
Energy infrastructure (e.g., principal energy sources & infrastructure used in research, production, and communication)Fossil-free in both work locations. At home via local renewable energy provided by energy coop and solar panels on roof and fossil-free energy at university office located in first natural gas free educational buidling in the Netherlands.Personal for home office; institutional for office at universityNot ApplicableYes
Transportation infrastructure (e.g., private or public transportation needed for daily or research trips)Cycling or walking to station on bike paths or sidewalk. Regional train networks to travel from residence in Groningen to Campus Fryslân.Largely up to my own decisions about what kind of transportation I want to embrace; availability of public transport options are up to regional government policy.Not ApplicableYes8810
Architectural infrastructure (e.g., buildings, labs, rooms)Home office in the city of Groningen, the Netherlands and Beurs building housing faculty in Leeuwarden. Flexible workspaces are increasingly common, though senior staff have been 'spared' so far.Personal for home office; institutional for office at university.Not ApplicableNot Applicable
Civic, community, national, or regional infrastructure (e.g. provided by cities, communities, governments, etc.)Universities are public institutions in the Netherlands, so there is a strong entwinement of the institution with civic life and government policies. The extreme right agenda being implemented in 2024 is putting strong pressures on Dutch universities and leading to mobilization of academic communities.Government; board of universities.YesNot Applicable
Institutional infrastructure (e.g., equipment, services, and "overhead" or “indirect cost recovery” items for grants to universities)Not ApplicableNot Applicable
Labor infrastructure (e.g., type & amount of labor from collaborators, staff, research assistants; include any attributes that seem important, such as unrecognized, unpaid, low-paid, outsourced, or other attributes of labor)The mutual support and stimulation of the research group. Knowledge infrastructures are sites of intellectual, social and emotional labor.Hiring is via institution, but mutuality is very much a group project, fed by example from group chair and reinforced through exchange practices and interactions in research meetings.YesYes1088
Research-content infrastructure (e.g., physical libraries and archives, online research materials, shadow libraries, etc.)Web-based repositories of my university, the interoperability of this system with libraries and repositories worldwide and platforms that support interaction with scholarly sources (Zotero) are essential to this work.Institutional.YesYes1099open movement has made major changes, but still a long way to go, as publishers have largely shifted their business model to see open access as their new cash cow
Tools infrastructure (e.g., principal analog tools and digital tools, scripts, or protocols used for research, writing, communication, production) (excluding high-performance computing, for which see below) Not ApplicableNot Applicable
Networked Platforms infrastructure (e.g., major networked or cloud platforms used for research, storage, analysis, sharing, communication, publication—e.g., Google Drive, Dropbox, AWS, etc.) (excluding high-performance computing, for which see below) File sharing platform: SurfdriveInstitutional access via universities to Surf, which is a national service for all institutions of higher education in the Netherlands.YesNot Applicable1055
High-performance computing infrastructure (here defined expansively to include the use not just of supercomputers and computer clusters or grids but any high-performance computing infrastructure or special GPU and other processors exceeding the capabilities of an individual workstation, laptop, or server.Not ApplicableNot ApplicableNot Applicable
Other infrastructure Not ApplicableNot Applicable

This infrastructure manifest was completed by Anne Beaulieu and reports on Chapter 1, “Interfaces for the Anthropocene.”

  1. a. Write descriptions as free-form text or as lists. Where feasible, suggest both categories and specific cases–e.g., “word processor: Word.” Also, for rows in which you describe more than one item (e.g., Material Infrastructure: car, computer, phone), you can use the “Description” field to provide any needed differentiating detail or quantitative measures for columns C through H, e.g., Car (reliability: 9), Computer (reliability: 8).

  2. b. Designate only for the most important infrastructure in fields where you list more than one. Use “Description” to differentiate as needed.

  3. c. Designate only for the most important infrastructure in fields where you list more than one. Use “Description” to differentiate as needed. Leave blank if not applicable

  4. d.Evaluate on a scale of 1 to 10 using whole numbers only, where 10 equals the most. In fields where you enter more than one item, provide the median number. Use “Description” to differentiate among items as needed. Leave blank if unknown or not applicable

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