Developing Bureaucracies for Environmental Governance: State Authority and World Bank Conditionality in Laos |
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Authors: | Sarinda Singh |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australias.singh2@uq.edu.au |
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Abstract: | This paper considers the on-going production of bureaucracies for environmental governance in developing countries and the ways in which donor engagement is reshaped through localised bureaucratic dynamics. In Laos, World Bank conditions associated with the Nam Theun 2 hydropower project saw the establishment of the Watershed Management and Protection Authority (WMPA). I examine internal dynamics at the WMPA headquarters in Nakai District, including formal institutions for forest management, informal institutions for recognising local authority and wealth redistribution and the personal aspirations of WMPA officials. In doing so, this piece contributes to current discussions about donor-driven institutional change, practices of state-making and the local “technocrats” who are personally confronted by the complex intersections of donor conditionality and state authority. |
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Keywords: | Bureaucratic reform state-making practices environment development World Bank Laos |
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