- School of Geography - Research Publications
School of Geography - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
2 results
Filters
Reset filtersSettings
Statistics
Citations
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 2 of 2
-
ItemNo Preview AvailablePerceptions and Practices of Investment: China's hydropower investments in mainland Southeast AsiaLamb, V (BRICS Initiative for Critical Agrarian Studies (BICAS), 2015)China is one of the major investors in hydropower development in mainland Southeast Asia, yet Chinese involvement in hydropower varies across the region. Popular and expert viewpoints on China’s investment in hydropower also vary widely. Many government representatives and domestic investors see Chinese partners as a key source of the large amounts of foreign exchange that are critical to development and economic growth. At the same time, questions about the ‘dominance’ of Chinese projects in various sectors, as well as about the motives guiding Chinese investments have triggered substantial public concern, with anti-Chinese attitudes intensifying across the region. In this working paper, we build on the insights gained from existing work on Chinese investment in the region, such as the rising powers framework, to examine the situation of ‘practice and perception’ of Chinese investment in hydropower in Vietnam and Myanmar. In considering these investments and trends, we also caution reinforcing or mobilizing xenophobic narratives about China.
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableMeetings, meetings, meetings, and meetings: regional governance, cross-border environments, and sovereign authorityLamb, V (RSiS (S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies), Nanyang Technological University, 2017)This working paper considers what regional meetings, such as the Mekong River Commission (MRC) Summit, accomplish in terms of transboundary environmental governance and reinforcement of sovereign authority, and what the implications are for who can speak on behalf of cross-border ecologies. The working paper introduces ‘summit ethnography’ as an approach for studying regional governance. This approach is positioned as a way of studying the elusive notions of regional environmental governance and regional governance community in a more embodied manner, emphasising that those who participate or are included/excluded as experts in regional governance are at stake in these meetings and the regional plans for development.