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Towards relational geometries of public participation and hydropower governance in the Lower Mekong River Basin
Institution:1. East-West Center, Hawai''i, United States;2. The University of Sydney, School of Geosciences, Australia;1. Department of Political Science, Federal University Otuoke, Bayelsa State, Nigeria;2. Department of Political Science, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria;3. Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria, South Africa;1. McGill University, Canada;2. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Abstract:The Lao People's Democratic Republic's aspirations to become the ‘battery’ of Southeast Asia has involved plans for a cascade of hydropower dams on the mainstream of the transboundary Mekong River. This has triggered the unprecedented undertaking of public stakeholder consultations under the Mekong River Commission's Procedures for Notification, Prior Consultation and Agreement (PNPCA). This paper focuses on PNPCA stakeholder consultations organized in Thailand and Cambodia, and seeks to understand how these stakeholder consultations, despite their merits in information sharing, have come to be criticized by civil society as a ‘rubber stamp’ for ‘participation’ in Lao hydropower development. Building upon the literature on public participation in development, critical hydropolitics, and stakeholder engagement in Mekong water governance, we seek to conceptualize a critical politics of public participation by adopting a relational approach towards identifying the key challenges relating to participation. We suggest that a relational approach must consider how the interrelations between the multiple formal and informal tracks of stakeholder engagement shape one another and overall opportunities for participation, and how power relations within these spaces impact on perceptions towards public participation. Distrust towards state-organized participatory spaces can be traced from the state-organized participatory spaces to another key interrelation: the power relations between state and nonstate actors in the multi-scalar political spaces that extend beyond participatory spaces. This paper examines how anti-participatory forces pose a challenge to the emergence of both state and nonstate participatory spaces, providing additional insights into the state-society dynamics that influence environmental outcomes around large-scale infrastructural development.
Keywords:Public participation  Hydropower development  Relational geography  Transboundary water governance  Mekong river
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