Power, Progress and Impoverishment: Plantations, Hydropower, Ecological Change and Community Transformation in Hinboun District, Lao PDR a Field Report
YCAR Papers No. I June 2007 Political Ecology series (Re)making Governance series Power, Progress and Impoverishment: Plantations, Hydropower, Ecological Change and Community Transformation in Hinboun District, Lao PDR A Field Report By Keith Barney Acknowledgements The fieldwork for this research was made possible through the institutional support and encouragement of the Faculty of Forestry, National University of Laos and the International Development Research Centre-CBNRM Capacity Building Program. The author would like to thank the NUoL - IDRC team, including: Vice-Dean Houngpeth Chanthavong, Vice-Dean Khamla Phanvilay, Sitthong Thongmanivong, Yayoi Fujita, Thoumthone Vongvisouk, Phansamai Phommisai, Emily Hunter, and Amalin Phanvilay for their kind assistance, advice, and camaraderie. Acknowledgements for ongoing support are extended to an excellent doctoral committee at York University in Toronto, comprised of: Philip Kelly, Peter Vandergeest, Shubhra Gururani and Linda Peake. In Laos, I extend personal thanks to: Glenn Hunt, Japan Volunteer Centre Vientiane; Michael Dwyer, University of California at Berkeley; Richard Hackman, Canada Fund Laos/Global Association for People and Environment, Pakse; and Aviva Imhof, International Rivers Network, Berkeley. In Toronto, Robin Roth from the York Centre for Asian Research provided timely editorial comments. Phornmanee Xayasouk and Phansamai Phommisai were invaluable and enthusiastic field research assistants in Hinboun district. Bobby Allen and Bounmaa Molaknasouk from the Theun-Hinboun Power Company, and Mark Linton from Oji-Lao Plantation Forestry Limited took time to meet with the author on several occasions. The author would also like to thank the Provincial Agriculture and Forestry Office (PAFO) of Khammouane province, Laos, for facilitating this fieldwork. Major funding for this research was provided through doctoral dissertation awards from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) in Ottawa, and Canada’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
[Show full text]