4.7 Article

Large hydropower and legitimacy: A policy regime analysis, applied to Myanmar

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 110, Issue -, Pages 619-630

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2017.08.043

Keywords

Energy governance; Hydropower; Policy regime; Gaining public acceptance; Political ecology; Mekong

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Hydropower development in capacity-constrained countries can unfold through unsound policy arguments, narrow institutional and implementing arrangements, and ad hoc decision making processes. To derive insights for more legitimate policy making, we provide the first holistic account of Myanmar's legitimation struggles over large hydropower, focusing on Myitsone, the country's most controversial dam, during the period 2003-2011. Our analysis takes a policy regime perspective (specifically, a political economic regime of provisioning framework). Among our findings: (1) frequent use of non-rationally persuasive argument among contending actors; (2) a spiral of declining policy legitimacy, which is amplified by civil society mobilization, and halted by a 2011 decision to suspend Myitsone; (3) rejection of Myitsone but conditional acceptance of large hydropower among some elements of civil society. Opportunity and capability for more technically informed, inclusive discussion exists in Myanmar, but given hydropower's complexities, urgently deserves to be augmented. Although Myitsone in Myanmar is an exceptional case, we offer three propositions to assess and improve policy legitimacy of hydropower.

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