The politics of hydropower: developing the Mekong |
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Institution: | 1. Loyola Marymount University, Department of Urban and Environmental Studies, 4326 University Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90045, United States;2. Philipps-Universität Marburg, Faculty of Geography, Deutschhausstr. 10, 35037 Marburg, Germany;1. Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain;2. Boǧaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey;3. Wageningen University, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | With renewed economic interest in the Southeast Asian region following the `peace dividend' of the early 1990s, numerous hydrodevelopment plans have been initiated in the Mekong basin. The river-as-resource, in a glibly bioregional metaphor, has been transformed from a Cold War `front line' into a `corridor of commerce', drawing six riparian states together in the pursuit of sustainable development through economic and infrastructural integration and cooperation, promoted by multi- and bilateral donors and lending institutions. Through a brief examination of the discursive framing of Mekong hydrodevelopment, this paper uncovers some of the implications of an emerging regional geopolitical imagination centred on the naturalising metaphor of the watershed. Through a discussion of the increasing involvement of private capital, and the politicisation of resource use, the implications of hydrodevelopment for Laos, an upstream state currently undergoing major hydrodevelopment, and Cambodia, a downstream state, are explored. |
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