How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia

We analyze environmental impact assessment (EIA) for infrastructure development projects in Latin America through the case of the "El Cercado" dam on the Rancheria river in La Guajira Province of northern Colombia. We argue that social and environmental conflicts regarding development proj...

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Main Authors: Susana Carmona Castillo, Claudia Puerta Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23223
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author Susana Carmona Castillo
Claudia Puerta Silva
author_facet Susana Carmona Castillo
Claudia Puerta Silva
author_sort Susana Carmona Castillo
collection DOAJ
description We analyze environmental impact assessment (EIA) for infrastructure development projects in Latin America through the case of the "El Cercado" dam on the Rancheria river in La Guajira Province of northern Colombia. We argue that social and environmental conflicts regarding development projects are not only the result of deficient EIA implementation but also of historically established power relations and deep-rooted beliefs concerning the economy and socio-spatial relations, of which EIAs are a constituting and enabling element. We focus on governmentality practices from an ethnographic political ecology perspective to trace how the EIA uses the concept of "areas of influence" as a standardized inclusion/exclusion technique, limited by its static nature and functioning as a legitimizing device for governmental interest to expand neoliberal economies in natural resource-strategic regions. Our analysis aims to understand how EIAs used for infrastructure development projects in Latin America have failed to prevent socio-environmental conflicts. At the same time, we question the notions of "space", "influence", and "affected population" behind EIA practices. We conclude that EIAs are a government technology of neoliberal environmental governance that has the potential to exclude the socio-spatial dynamics of local populations while depoliticizing the interests behind the project. With this article, we contribute to the ethnographic approach to governmentality in the context of infrastructure development projects in Latin America and to the understanding of the role of expert knowledge and technologies of government in neoliberal hydro-politics. Keywords: Environmental Impact Assessment, dam, hydro-politics, government technologies, social conflict
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spelling doaj.art-35dd9812ab1d4820bc7be54f69f0ec0f2022-12-21T20:02:48ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512020-12-012711072109110.2458/v27i1.2322322840How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in ColombiaSusana Carmona Castillo0Claudia Puerta Silva1Universidad de los Andes, Colombia Ruhr University Bochum, GermanyUniversidad de Antioquia, ColombiaWe analyze environmental impact assessment (EIA) for infrastructure development projects in Latin America through the case of the "El Cercado" dam on the Rancheria river in La Guajira Province of northern Colombia. We argue that social and environmental conflicts regarding development projects are not only the result of deficient EIA implementation but also of historically established power relations and deep-rooted beliefs concerning the economy and socio-spatial relations, of which EIAs are a constituting and enabling element. We focus on governmentality practices from an ethnographic political ecology perspective to trace how the EIA uses the concept of "areas of influence" as a standardized inclusion/exclusion technique, limited by its static nature and functioning as a legitimizing device for governmental interest to expand neoliberal economies in natural resource-strategic regions. Our analysis aims to understand how EIAs used for infrastructure development projects in Latin America have failed to prevent socio-environmental conflicts. At the same time, we question the notions of "space", "influence", and "affected population" behind EIA practices. We conclude that EIAs are a government technology of neoliberal environmental governance that has the potential to exclude the socio-spatial dynamics of local populations while depoliticizing the interests behind the project. With this article, we contribute to the ethnographic approach to governmentality in the context of infrastructure development projects in Latin America and to the understanding of the role of expert knowledge and technologies of government in neoliberal hydro-politics. Keywords: Environmental Impact Assessment, dam, hydro-politics, government technologies, social conflicthttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23223
spellingShingle Susana Carmona Castillo
Claudia Puerta Silva
How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
Journal of Political Ecology
title How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
title_full How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
title_fullStr How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
title_full_unstemmed How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
title_short How do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict? Government technologies in a dam project in Colombia
title_sort how do environmental impact assessments fail to prevent social conflict government technologies in a dam project in colombia
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23223
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