Transnational Capitalism and Hydropolitics in Argentina: The Yacyreta High Dam

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From the foreword:
“Certain milestones mark the growth and maturation of a system of knowledge.  [This] study constitutes this kind of turning point.”

“A powerful critique of mainstream understandings of ‘development.'”–Richard Tardanico, Florida International University

What does a multi-billion-dollar dam mean to the majority of local people living in precarious social and economic conditions?  In this study of a big-scale international infrastructure project, Ribeiro found one answer: the prevailing model of development should change.

 He demonstrates why and how development, in the context of the Yacyretá High Dam in Argentina, has not been in a position to bring about well-being on a sustainable basis for most of the people affected by the project.  He maintains that development, which he calls “economic expansion,” is played on a field of political and economic struggle where the players who start the action keep the advantage.  He links development projects more closely to the needs of national and international elites than to the local populations, and he coins the term “consortiation” to describe the interaction among capitalist agencies involved in the projects.

 This is the first anthropological work to study a large-scale infrastructure project from within.  At the same time as Ribeiro analyzes the different power groups who competed for get right of entry to to and keep an eye on of the high dam, he also shows how the dam modified the social and physical landscape and examines the upward push of a new roughly nomadic laborer with a distinct identity, the “bicho de obra”–work site animal.  Social scientists, regional planners, engineers, diplomats, and environmentalists will find this book useful.
 

Gustavo Lins Ribeiro is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Brasilia.

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