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    The consensual politics of development: a case study of hydropower development in the eastern Himalayan region of India

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    Authors
    Joshi, Deepa
    Platteeuw, J.
    Teoh, J.
    Date Issued
    2019-12
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    Copyrighted; all rights reserved
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    Citation
    Joshi, Deepa; Platteeuw, J.; Teoh, J. 2019. The consensual politics of development: a case study of hydropower development in the eastern Himalayan region of India. New Angle: Nepal Journal of Social Science and Public Policy, 5(1):74-98. (Special issue: Water Security and Inclusive Water Governance in the Himalayas)
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108360
    External link to download this item: http://www.nepalpolicynet.com/new/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/5_Joshi-et-al-2019.pdf
    Abstract/Description
    Criticism and contestation of large dam projects have a long, strong history in India. In this paper, we analyze diverse civil-society responses to large dam projects in the Eastern Himalaya region of India, which has in the past decades been presented as a clean, green, climate-mitigating way of generating energy, but critiqued for its adverse impacts more recently. We draw our findings primarily based on interviews with NGOs involved in environmental and/or water issues in Darjeeling, interviews with those involved in a local people’s movement ‘Affected Citizens of Teesta’, and participatory research over the course of three years between 2015 and 2018. Our findings show how doing development for the state, the market and/or donor organizations compromises the ability of NGOs in the Darjeeling region to hold these actors accountable for social and environmental excesses. In the same region, dam projects in North Sikkim led to a local people’s movement, where expressions of indigeneity, identity and place were used to critique and contest the State’s agenda of development, in ways that were symptomatically different to NGOs tied down by relations of developmental bureaucracy. Our findings reveal how the incursion of State authority, presence and power in civil-society undermines the civil society mandate of transformative social change, and additionally, how the geographical, political, institutional and identity-based divides that fragment diverse civil-society institutions and actors make it challenging to counter the increasingly consensual politics of environmental governance.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    hydropower; development projects; political aspects; nongovernmental organizations; civil society organizations; state intervention; climate change mitigation; policies; dams; social aspects; case studies
    Countries
    India
    Regions
    Asia; Southern Asia
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Water Management Institute
    Collections
    • IWMI Journal Articles [2546]

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