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Hacking the Underground

Disability, Infrastructure, and London’s Public Transport System

Raquel

Velho

reveals ho W kno W ledge from the margins sha P es infrastru C tures

“Minding the gap” while using a wheelchair on the London Underground goes beyond a sharp eye and careful foot placement to avoid a fall: it can entail carrying and deploying a portable ramp to embark and disembark or carefully mapping out a custom route ahead of time. The extensive infrastructure of London’s public transportation system requires constant improvisation from users who move through the system differently than nondisabled people do. Centering the voices of disabled passengers, Hacking the Underground highlights how marginalized groups subvert and ultimately transform infrastructures, actively shaping them.

Raquel Velho draws on emancipatory action research in London, capturing the hegemonic character of infrastructures without losing the experiences and actions of marginalized users. Proposing a crip feminist and profoundly relational approach to infrastructure, Velho illustrates how the built environment holds the potential for both inclusionary and exclusionary world-building.

“Beautifully written and remarkable in its conceptualization of infrastructure. Disability studies and science and technology studies have long needed a book exactly like this.” —Aimi Hamraie, author of Building Access: Universal Design and the Politics of Disability

“Velho captures the texture of daily living in relation to public transportation (and lack thereof). Hacking the Underground will be of great interest to many, including disabled people, disability activists, allies, designers, planners, and organizers.” —Alison Kafer, author of Feminist, Queer, Crip

Raquel Velho is assistant professor of science and technology studies at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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