Introduction: Turbulent Circulation: Building a Critical Engagement with Logistics
Abstract
Since the mid-20th century, logistics has evolved into a wide-ranging science of circulation involved in planning and managing flows of innumerable kinds. In this introductory essay, we take stock of the ascendancy and proliferation of logistics, proposing a critical engagement with the field. We argue that logistics is not limited to the management of supply chains, military or corporate. Rather, it is better understood as a calculative logic and spatial practice of circulation that is at the fore of the reorganization of capitalism and war. Viewed from this perspective, the rise of logistics has transformed not only the physical movement of materials but also the very rationality by which space is organized It has remade economic and military space according to a universalizing logic of abstract flow, exacerbating existing patterns of uneven geographical development. Drawing on the articles that make up this themed issue, we propose that a critical approach to logistics is characterized by three core commitments: (I) a rejection of the field's self-depiction as an apolitical science of management, along with a commitment to highlighting the relations of power and acts of violence that underpin it; (2) an interest in exposing the flaws, irrationalities, and vulnerabilities of logistical regimes; and (3) an orientation toward contestation and struggle within logistical networks.
Repository Citation
Chua, Charmaine, Martin Danyluk, and Deborah Cowen. 2018. "Introduction: Turbulent Circulation: Building a Critical Engagement with Logistics." Environment and Planning D-Society & Space 36(4): 617-629.
Publisher
Sage Publications
Publication Date
1-8-2018
Publication Title
Environment and Planning D-Society & Space
Department
Politics
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775818783101
Keywords
Logistics, Circulation, Supply-chain capitalism
Language
English
Format
text