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Damming Rivers in Cambodia: Impacts of Water-Grabbing on Land and Resource Access Damming Rivers in Cambodia: Impacts of Water-Grabbing on Land and Resource Access
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An increasing number of dams have been built and proposed in Cambodia over the last decade to feed the increasing demand for energy that accompanies growing urbanization. However, the costs and benefits of damming Cambodia’s rivers are inequitable distributed as, as many of these dams were built in rural areas and forests, which are home to diverse ethnic minorities. This talk discusses the Lower Sesan 2 Dam, Cambodia’s biggest hydropower dam that is built on an ecologically significant Mekong River tributary system, and its impacts on the land and resource access of different ethnic groups. In the dam-affected areas, the abrupt hydrological changes caused by the dam have escalated land struggles among various ethnic groups, intensifying land grabs and the sociopolitical marginalization of those with limited access to land and resources. This talk also considers how the immediate and cumulative impacts of hydropower dams across the Mekong River have intensified long-term land and resource struggles in Cambodia.

Sopheak Chann is visiting postdoctoral fellow at James Madison Colleges, Michigan State University, and a lecturer at the Department of Natural Resource Management and Development, Royal University of Phnom Penh. He received his Ph.D. in Human Geography from the University of Sydney in 2017 and a master's degree in Applied Sciences, Spatial Information Sciences also from the University of Sydney in 2009. He did his bachelor's degree in Environmental Management at the Royal University of Phnom Penh from 2002 to 2006. His research interests are critical development, environmental justice, political ecology of post-conflict resource landscapes, critical cartography, and climate change.


The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect East-West Center policies or positions.

An increasing number of dams have been built and proposed in Cambodia over the last decade to feed the increasing demand for energy that accompanies growing urbanization. However, the costs and benefits of damming Cambodia’s rivers are inequitable distributed as, as many of these dams were built in rural areas and forests, which are home to diverse ethnic minorities. This talk discusses the Lower Sesan 2 Dam, Cambodia’s biggest hydropower dam that is built on an ecologically significant Mekong River tributary system, and its impacts on the land and resource access of different ethnic groups. In the dam-affected areas, the abrupt hydrological changes caused by the dam have escalated land struggles among various ethnic groups, intensifying land grabs and the sociopolitical marginalization of those with limited access to land and resources. This talk also considers how the immediate and cumulative impacts of hydropower dams across the Mekong River have intensified long-term land and resource struggles in Cambodia.

Sopheak Chann is visiting postdoctoral fellow at James Madison Colleges, Michigan State University, and a lecturer at the Department of Natural Resource Management and Development, Royal University of Phnom Penh. He received his Ph.D. in Human Geography from the University of Sydney in 2017 and a master's degree in Applied Sciences, Spatial Information Sciences also from the University of Sydney in 2009. He did his bachelor's degree in Environmental Management at the Royal University of Phnom Penh from 2002 to 2006. His research interests are critical development, environmental justice, political ecology of post-conflict resource landscapes, critical cartography, and climate change.


The views expressed are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect East-West Center policies or positions.