This document discusses two key concepts related to dams and development in China:
1. Statemaking in peripheral regions like Yunnan, where hydropower dams are built to provide power to other parts of China, often displacing local minority populations.
2. The "moral economy" of water and how different groups argue for different approaches to water resource management based on their own values and objectives, such as the government prioritizing hydropower versus local communities' connection to water.
The document examines how power is negotiated over decisions around building dams, where to send the power, relocating people, indigenous rights, cross-border environmental impacts, and balancing development and the environment.
This document discusses two key concepts related to dams and development in China:
1. Statemaking in peripheral regions like Yunnan, where hydropower dams are built to provide power to other parts of China, often displacing local minority populations.
2. The "moral economy" of water and how different groups argue for different approaches to water resource management based on their own values and objectives, such as the government prioritizing hydropower versus local communities' connection to water.
The document examines how power is negotiated over decisions around building dams, where to send the power, relocating people, indigenous rights, cross-border environmental impacts, and balancing development and the environment.
This document discusses two key concepts related to dams and development in China:
1. Statemaking in peripheral regions like Yunnan, where hydropower dams are built to provide power to other parts of China, often displacing local minority populations.
2. The "moral economy" of water and how different groups argue for different approaches to water resource management based on their own values and objectives, such as the government prioritizing hydropower versus local communities' connection to water.
The document examines how power is negotiated over decisions around building dams, where to send the power, relocating people, indigenous rights, cross-border environmental impacts, and balancing development and the environment.
Water and Power EDS102 November 2017 Two concepts • 1. Statemaking: • Yunnan – periphery, minority populations • Part of Zomia – vast highland area, northern part • Backward, underdeveloped • Hydropower for other parts of China, the east, coastal areas • Nationalities question – characteristics of minority groups • Contested nature of ‘development’ – hydropower dams • Book is the details of how these debates take place, policies, contestations, conflicts • Those who have to live with dams very distant from those who plan them Moral economy Second concept Are some commodities subject to other considerations other than price? Water related to core values Different groups argue for water-resource-management objectives Government, hydropower corporations, NGOs, local communities. Each of these groups (or parts of them) have values, norms. They use these to get the policy outcomes they desire. How do we understand power? • Power is hydroelectric power – but how is it decided where to build the dams, where to send the power, where to relocate people • Rights and power of indigenous peoples? • Consequences of dams for other nations along the watersheds of the Nu River and the Lancang • How are the ecological effects of dam building researched, taken into account? • Balancing environment and development