Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil

This research project focuses on decision-making about large hydropower dams, particularly the process and outcomes of impact assessment, involving state, corporations, and local Indigenous communities. The objective of the study is to investigate whether state-led impact assessment, as one tool of...

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Main Author: Macias Gimenez, Rebeca
Other Authors: Curran, Deborah
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12885
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-128852021-04-29T05:26:21Z Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil Macias Gimenez, Rebeca Curran, Deborah Environmental decision-making Impact Assessment Indigenous People Hydropower dams Disparate adverse effects joint decision-making process Site C dam Belo Monte dam This research project focuses on decision-making about large hydropower dams, particularly the process and outcomes of impact assessment, involving state, corporations, and local Indigenous communities. The objective of the study is to investigate whether state-led impact assessment, as one tool of regulatory decision-making, can be a way to address environmental justice concerns for Indigenous peoples affected by natural resource infrastructure. The core of this research is a case study comparison between the Belo Monte dam (Brazil) and Site C dam (Canada) to examine the effectiveness of environmental impact assessment (EIA) and decision-making. I analyse these processes’ ability to address the inequities caused by disparate adverse effects of dams on Indigenous peoples. Despite evidence of the impacts of large dams on Indigenous peoples, there is limited literature on their experiences with large hydropower projects and their decision-making processes, and mechanisms that would account for Indigenous peoples’ experiences. This research aims to fill in that gap in the literature by exposing the limitations of impact assessment and proposing recommendations for environmental decision-making to address Indigenous peoples’ concerns and experiences. I start with a review of the development of the environmental justice (EJ) literature as the research’s analytical framework. Environmental justice focuses on diagnosing the inequities caused to localized communities under the argument of a necessary ‘smaller evil,’ so that the larger society may benefit from natural resources development. However, the research participants’ experiences pointed to the need to revise the EJ framework towards a more integral approach to environmental decision-making, recognising the fundamental relationship between land and human beings. This research project concludes that EJ for Indigenous peoples helps reinstate decision-making purposes – evaluating the impacts, proposing alternatives to projects, promoting transparency and accountability, and considering the possibility of rejecting projects – when done within a genuine government-to-government collaborative framework between state and Indigenous governments. Graduate 2021-04-28T01:52:23Z 2021-04-28T01:52:23Z 2021 2021-04-27 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12885 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental decision-making
Impact Assessment
Indigenous People
Hydropower dams
Disparate adverse effects
joint decision-making process
Site C dam
Belo Monte dam
spellingShingle Environmental decision-making
Impact Assessment
Indigenous People
Hydropower dams
Disparate adverse effects
joint decision-making process
Site C dam
Belo Monte dam
Macias Gimenez, Rebeca
Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
description This research project focuses on decision-making about large hydropower dams, particularly the process and outcomes of impact assessment, involving state, corporations, and local Indigenous communities. The objective of the study is to investigate whether state-led impact assessment, as one tool of regulatory decision-making, can be a way to address environmental justice concerns for Indigenous peoples affected by natural resource infrastructure. The core of this research is a case study comparison between the Belo Monte dam (Brazil) and Site C dam (Canada) to examine the effectiveness of environmental impact assessment (EIA) and decision-making. I analyse these processes’ ability to address the inequities caused by disparate adverse effects of dams on Indigenous peoples. Despite evidence of the impacts of large dams on Indigenous peoples, there is limited literature on their experiences with large hydropower projects and their decision-making processes, and mechanisms that would account for Indigenous peoples’ experiences. This research aims to fill in that gap in the literature by exposing the limitations of impact assessment and proposing recommendations for environmental decision-making to address Indigenous peoples’ concerns and experiences. I start with a review of the development of the environmental justice (EJ) literature as the research’s analytical framework. Environmental justice focuses on diagnosing the inequities caused to localized communities under the argument of a necessary ‘smaller evil,’ so that the larger society may benefit from natural resources development. However, the research participants’ experiences pointed to the need to revise the EJ framework towards a more integral approach to environmental decision-making, recognising the fundamental relationship between land and human beings. This research project concludes that EJ for Indigenous peoples helps reinstate decision-making purposes – evaluating the impacts, proposing alternatives to projects, promoting transparency and accountability, and considering the possibility of rejecting projects – when done within a genuine government-to-government collaborative framework between state and Indigenous governments. === Graduate
author2 Curran, Deborah
author_facet Curran, Deborah
Macias Gimenez, Rebeca
author Macias Gimenez, Rebeca
author_sort Macias Gimenez, Rebeca
title Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
title_short Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
title_full Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
title_fullStr Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Hydro dams and environmental justice for Indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in Canada and Brazil
title_sort hydro dams and environmental justice for indigenous people. a comparison of environmental decision-making in canada and brazil
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12885
work_keys_str_mv AT maciasgimenezrebeca hydrodamsandenvironmentaljusticeforindigenouspeopleacomparisonofenvironmentaldecisionmakingincanadaandbrazil
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