Energy Protests in Fragile Settings: The Unruly Politics of Provisions in Egypt, Myanmar, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Zimbabwe, 2007–2017
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Hossain, Naomi (Author)
- Aremu, Fatai (Author)
- Buschmann, Andy (Author)
- Chaimite, Egidio (Author)
- Gukurume, Simbarashe (Author)
- Javed, Umair (Author)
- da Luz (aka Azagaia), Edson (Author)
- Ojebode, Ayobami (Author)
- Oosterom, Marjoke (Author)
- Marston, Olivia (Author)
- Shankland, Alex (Author)
- Tadros, Mariz (Author)
- Taela, Kátia (Author)
Title
Energy Protests in Fragile Settings: The Unruly Politics of Provisions in Egypt, Myanmar, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Zimbabwe, 2007–2017
Abstract
How do popular protests about the basics of everyday life, specifically about energy, come
about in settings where political authority is fragmented and conflict and repression
common? How do state and political actors respond to protests which disrupt social and
economic life, and undermine public authority? To what extent do such mass protests, often
justified as inherently moral struggles over the basics of everyday life, empower the
powerless or hold the powerful to account in such political settings? And how do external
actors shape these events? These are the questions addressed in this paper, part of a
research project under the UK Aid-funded Action for Empowerment and Accountability
(A4EA) programme at the Institute of Development Studies, Sussex. It is a preliminary effort
to make sense of a specific category of popular protests, mass protests about the
affordability or availability of fuel or energy, seen as among the contentious ‘politics of
provisions’, or elite-mass struggles over policies governing the necessities of everyday life.
The paper aims to: (a) contribute to theoretical debates about the kinds of social and political action that strengthen accountability and empower the marginalised in fragile and conflict-affected settings; (b) make an empirical contribution to the contentious politics literature with new evidence about the nature of energy-related protests (or ‘fuel riots’) in developing countries, to strengthen the political economy analysis of energy subsidy reforms and austerity programmes, shedding new light specifically on the tendencies of non-democratic regimes to maintain high fuel subsidies; and (c) generate knowledge about how the behaviour and practices of external actors shape how energy protests play out in these fragile political settings, in order to inform policy and practice.
Publisher
IDS
Date
2018-06
Language
en
ISBN
978-1-78118-449-3
Short Title
Energy Protests in Fragile Settings
Accessed
13/05/2021, 10:48
Library Catalogue
opendocs.ids.ac.uk
Rights
This is an Open Access paper distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 4.0 International licence, which permits downloading and sharing provided the original authors and source are credited – but the work is not used for commercial purposes. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode
Extra
Accepted: 2018-06-05T11:35:25Z
ISSN: 2040-0209
Citation
Hossain, N., Aremu, F., Buschmann, A., Chaimite, E., Gukurume, S., Javed, U., da Luz (aka Azagaia), E., Ojebode, A., Oosterom, M., Marston, O., Shankland, A., Tadros, M., & Taela, K. (2018). Energy Protests in Fragile Settings: The Unruly Politics of Provisions in Egypt, Myanmar, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Zimbabwe, 2007–2017. IDS. https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/20.500.12413/13808
Geography / Geografia
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