Publication: Megaprojects—mega failures? The politics of aspiration

Megaprojects are returning to play a key role in the transformation of rural Africa, despite controversies over their outcome. While some view them as promising tools for a ‘big push’ of modernization, others criticize their multiple adverse effects and risk of failure. Against this backdrop, the paper revisits earlier concepts that have explained megaproject failures by referring to problems of managerial complexity and the logics of state-led development. Taking recent examples from Kenya, the paper argues for a more differentiated approach, considering the symbolic role infrastructure megaprojects play in future-oriented development politics as objects of imagination, vision, and hope. We propose to explain the outcomes of megaprojects by focusing on the ‘politics of aspiration’, which unfold at the intersection between different actors and scales. The paper gives an overview of large infrastructure projects in Kenya and places them in the context of the country´s national development agenda ‘Vision 2030′. It identifies the relevant actors and investigates how controversial aspirations, interests and foreign influences play out on the ground. The paper concludes by describing megaproject development as future making, driven by the mobilizing power of the ‘politics of aspiration’. The analysis of megaprojects should consider not only material outcomes but also their symbolic dimension for desirable futures.

Müller-Mahn, D., Mkutu, K., Kioko, E. (2021): Megaprojects—mega failures? The politics of aspiration and the transformation of rural Kenya. The European Journal of Development Research DOI.

More CRC News

cover for a web post

Available Positions for Third Funding Phase

We are pleased that our research project has received funding for a third project phase (2026-2029). As part of this next phase, we will be ...
Read More »
cover for a web post

New Study Reveals How Urban Greening Fuels Displacement and Inequality in Nairobi’s Informal Settlements

In this study, Valentine Opanga (associate researcher Project C03 “Green Futures”) and Prince Guma (Cambridge University) analyse how struggles over green and ungreened spaces in ...
Read More »
cover for a web post

CRC-TRR 228 Future Rural Africa Awarded Funding for a Third Project Phase (2026-2029) by German Research Foundation (DFG)

We are thrilled to announce that the German Research Foundation (DFG) has awarded the Collaborative Research Centre TRR 228 Future Rural Africa funding for another ...
Read More »
image shows a field in eastern Africa

New Study Reveals How Tanzanian Farmers Navigate Conflicting Sustainability Worlds

Saymore Ngonidzashe Kativu (Project B05 “Science Futures”) argues that smallholder farmers in Mbeya, Tanzania navigate conflicting market-based and eco-cultural ideas of sustainability by creating hybrid farming ...
Read More »
the image shows an industrial area

New Publication: How State Strategies in Special Economic Zones Shape Labor Outcomes in Ethiopia and Zambia

Carolina Kiesel and Peter Dannenberg (Project C01 “Future in Chains”) analyse how different state strategies for developing Special Economic Zones (SEZs) shape labour outcomes. Comparing ...
Read More »
Scroll to Top