Thinkers whose frameworks illuminate this section.
Illich's tools for conviviality draws the line between tools that expand human capacity and tools that produce counter-productive dependency — the same distinction Cowen makes between infrastructure that serves communities and infrastructure that extracts from them. Illich's concept of radical monopoly parallels Cowen's analysis of logistical systems that structurally prevent alternatives.
Hochschild's The Second Shift documents the domestic labor that professional work systematically displaces — the structural mechanism Cowen identifies as the lateral redistribution of friction onto domestic partners. Hochschild's analysis of emotional labor as invisible work parallels Cowen's analysis of cognitive supply chains that render labor invisible.
Federici's analysis of reproductive labor — the unpaid care work that sustains the productive economy — is the feminist foundation of Cowen's lateral redistribution framework. The domestic partners absorbing the friction of AI-accelerated work are doing precisely the reproductive labor that Federici's framework makes visible and Cowen's supply chain analysis tracks.
Mbembe's necropolitics extends Foucault's biopolitics to analyze which populations are made to bear the lethal costs of modern governance — a framework that Cowen's logistical violence concept directly engages. The communities absorbing port pollution, the annotation workforces processing trauma, the climate-vulnerable populations paying the energy costs: these are necropolitical distributions.
Haraway's cyborg manifesto and situated knowledge frameworks are epistemological companions to Cowen's logistical analysis — both insist that the view from nowhere (the pipeline that sees only flow) is a political fiction that conceals the view from somewhere (the communities absorbing the costs). Haraway's insistence on partial perspective maps onto Cowen's distributional audit.
Zuboff's surveillance capitalism framework diagnoses the same extraction Cowen analyzes from the logistical side — both identify systems designed to convert human experience into raw material for profit, with costs externalized onto populations whose consent was never sought. Zuboff's behavioral modification parallels Cowen's analysis of how the discourse of choice absorbs resistance.
Gramsci's analysis of hegemony — the process by which dominant arrangements are naturalized as common sense — underlies Cowen's discourse of choice concept. The language of efficiency, democratization, and individual choice that insulates AI infrastructure from political challenge is hegemonic in Gramsci's precise sense: it makes structural coercion legible only as personal freedom.
Winner's 'Do Artifacts Have Politics?' is the canonical statement of Cowen's foundational claim — that infrastructure encodes power. Winner's analysis of how Robert Moses's bridges encoded racial exclusion is the exact same analytical move Cowen makes with containerization and AI pipelines: design choices are political choices, readable in the architecture.
Franklin's The Real World of Technology distinguishes between holistic and prescriptive technologies — technologies that support the practitioner's judgment versus technologies that fragment work into optimized sequences that eliminate judgment. This is Cowen's distinction between the always-on pipeline (prescriptive, eliminates rest, absorbs the worker) and infrastructure otherwise (holistic, sustains the community).
bell hooks's analysis of how dominant systems render marginalized labor invisible and redirect attention to the dominant experience parallels Cowen's supply chain visibility argument. The annotation workforces in Kenya, the communities surrounding ports, the domestic partners absorbing friction — these are the invisible labor forces that hooks's framework insists on making central to any honest accounting.
Antonovsky's salutogenic framework — asking what keeps people healthy rather than what makes them sick — is Cowen's analytical complement on the individual dimension. Where Cowen maps the structural redistribution of friction onto communities, Antonovsky maps the generalized resistance resources that individuals can build to navigate high-demand environments. Together they frame the pipeline's challenge at both the structural and the personal scale.