Data Centres (DCs) have emerged as the key  infrastructure for amassing and processing the lifeblood of the globalised  digital economy—data. So far, the  digital economy has been studied in terms of information technology labour,  regimes of privacy or data protection, and the implications of living in an  increasingly connected world.
  Data Centres as Infrastructure goes beyond  technical/business-oriented accounts of DCs and views them as both an object  and a principle of governance in India, one of the world's most prominent  rising markets for DCs. The authors understand DCs not just as technical  infrastructure, but as political institutions that make and exercise new forms  of power while negotiating state and capital in the postcolonial nation. 
  Taking a historical and  sociological approach to DCs, this volume explores actual social contexts of  policy-making and practice in relation to problems of digitalisation that  inflect the way in which lives, commerce, and governance are shaped in India. Through case studies, the  authors examine a ‘captive’ Data Centre deployed  by the state-owned electricity discom— WBSEDCL, to highlight a specific techno-political issue—the theft  of power  and the ‘(un)management’ of its loss. The volume also examines the production of  a new form of territoriality, economy, and polity in the Navi Mumbai area,  known for being home to several large DCs. The Introduction highlights some of  these concerns through a discussion of how the Indian state  yields space to norms of corporatised governance while also enrolling  new kinds of data-fied subjects through the  Aadhaar project, demonetisation, and ‘data localisation’.
  This novel contribution will interest scholars and  policy professionals concerned about the social and political impact of the  digital economy in India.