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A watershed in global governance? An independent assessment of the World Commission on Dams (Executive Summary)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2016

Navroz K. Dubash
Affiliation:
World Resources Institute, 10 G Street, NE (Suite 800), Washington, D.C. 20002 USA [email protected]
Mairi Dupar
Affiliation:
World Resources Institute, 10 G Street, NE (Suite 800), Washington, D.C. 20002 USA [email protected]
Smitu Kothari
Affiliation:
Lokayan Social Action Group, 13 Alipur Road, Delhi 110054 India [email protected]
Tundu Lissu
Affiliation:
Lawyers' Environmental Action Team (LEAT), Mazingira House, Mazingira Street, Mikocheni Area, P. O. Box 12605, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania [email protected]
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Extract

In mid-2000, Medha Patkar, a leader of one of the best-known social movements in India, and Goran Lindahl, the Chief Executive Officer of one of the world's largest engineering firms, participated in a meeting together in Cape Town. The two came from different worlds. Patkar was weak from undertaking a hunger strike to protest a dam on the Narmada River in western India. Lindahl arrived at the last minute on his private jet. Before their meeting, Patkar animatedly described the recent protests, showed Lindahl pictures of the villagers, and narrated their experiences.

Type
Harrison Symposium I
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Politics and the Life Sciences 

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References

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39.These views were captured in official letters from the National Water Agency of Brazil and the Government of Nepal to the World Bank, February 2001.Google Scholar
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