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ID171914
Title ProperWhen land, water and green‐grabbing cumulate
Other Title InformationHydropower expansion, livelihood resource reallocation and legitimisation in southwest China
LanguageENG
AuthorRousseau, Jean‐François
Summary / Abstract (Note)Hundreds of hydropower dam projects, of all sizes, have been initiated in Yunnan Province, China, since the late 1990s. This paper frames hydropower‐driven resource reallocations as resource grabs that combine aspects of land, water and green‐grabbing, investigating how two dams built along the Red River have impacted local communities and how corporate and governmental stakeholders have viewed local livelihood changes and considered compensation mechanisms. This research documents how hydropower expansion triggers changes in both land and water availability, in turn depriving riverside communities of a wide range of intersecting livelihood benefits. Villagers were compensated for some losses, but in ways that failed to address how impacts accumulated over time and how hydrologic changes would impact overall livelihood activities. Financial compensation and specific environmental and modernisation agendas legitimised resource reallocations together with the provincial, national and global development campaigns driving them. Considering how different actors experience, frame and address the impacts of hydropower development through a resource‐grabbing lens elucidates the compartmentalised approaches of distant hydropower actors as well as scholars. This study answers recent calls to mobilise the scholarship on resource‐grabbing in the service of shedding light on the socio‐political projects driving resource reallocations and their livelihood impacts.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 61, No.1; Apr 2020: p.134-146
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2020-04 61, 1
Key WordsEthnic Minorities ;  Southwest China ;  Farmer Livelihoods ;  Hydropower Resource Grabbing