KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies

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Water and hydropower

Diana Suhardiman

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This chapter in the edited volume Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Laos unpacks the institutional disjuncture in the hydropower decision-making landscape and processes in the Mekong region.

Abstract

The chapter looks at actors’ and institutions’ strategies to transform the current institutional disjuncture into political spaces of engagement, as means to pursue their respective and sometimes conflicting interests, and how these unfold in (re)shaping of water governance structure, processes and outcomes across scales. Placing hydropower development and water governance within the broader context of contemporary struggle for inclusive development, the chapter unpacks processes of contestation in hydropower decision making.

Taking Pak Beng hydropower project in Laos as a case study, it illustrates: (1) how institutional disjuncture and power asymmetry in hydropower decision making in Laos is manifested in formal institutional vacuum at grassroots level; (2) the relations between collective action (or the lack thereof) and various types and forms of political spaces of engagement; and (3) the importance of farm household strategies in weighing the cost and benefit between individual and collective action in the overall shaping of these political spaces of engagement.

Author

Diana Suhardiman

Book

Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Laos

25-02-2026

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Book cover Laos thumbnail

Book cover Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Laos.

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Koninklijk Nederlands Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde
Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies