Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories

The intention with this essay is to illustrate the conflicts that might occur when states implement renewable energy strategies on lands that have traditionally belonged to indigenous peoples. To do so I have analysed case studies from Sweden as well as Latin America regarding renewable energy proje...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bergman, Jonas
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: Högskolan Dalarna, Religionsvetenskap 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-33799
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spelling ftunivdalarna:oai:DiVA.org:du-33799 2023-10-29T02:39:53+01:00 Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories Bergman, Jonas 2020 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-33799 eng eng Högskolan Dalarna, Religionsvetenskap http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-33799 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Indigenous peoples renewable energy ILO 169 UNDRIP Sami people wind power Religious Studies Religionsvetenskap Student thesis info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis text 2020 ftunivdalarna 2023-09-29T14:55:10Z The intention with this essay is to illustrate the conflicts that might occur when states implement renewable energy strategies on lands that have traditionally belonged to indigenous peoples. To do so I have analysed case studies from Sweden as well as Latin America regarding renewable energy projects in areas that could be claimed to belong to indigenous groups and compared the conclusions from these studies to what the existing legal framework on the topic of the rights of indigenous peoples dictates. The results show that the main international legislation on the topic is very clear in expressing that states should grant indigenous peoples access to lands and territories that have traditionally been occupied by them, as well as granting them participation in the exploitation of natural resources. The analysis of the case studies shows that there exists a tendency among states to bypass what is stipulated in the international regulations when executing renewable energy projects, as well as using the term “sustainable development” as a cover-up when violating the rights of indigenous peoples. Although the international legislation on the topic is very precise, the majority of the world’s countries have not ratified the main legally binding convention. I conclude that one reason for this could be that states would find it hard to reach environmental objectives while at the same time complying with the legislation on the rights of indigenous peoples, i.e. states face difficulties in fulfilling sustainable environmental and economic objectives with sustainable social objectives. Bachelor Thesis sami Dalarna University: Publications (DiVA)
institution Open Polar
collection Dalarna University: Publications (DiVA)
op_collection_id ftunivdalarna
language English
topic Indigenous peoples
renewable energy
ILO 169
UNDRIP
Sami people
wind power
Religious Studies
Religionsvetenskap
spellingShingle Indigenous peoples
renewable energy
ILO 169
UNDRIP
Sami people
wind power
Religious Studies
Religionsvetenskap
Bergman, Jonas
Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
topic_facet Indigenous peoples
renewable energy
ILO 169
UNDRIP
Sami people
wind power
Religious Studies
Religionsvetenskap
description The intention with this essay is to illustrate the conflicts that might occur when states implement renewable energy strategies on lands that have traditionally belonged to indigenous peoples. To do so I have analysed case studies from Sweden as well as Latin America regarding renewable energy projects in areas that could be claimed to belong to indigenous groups and compared the conclusions from these studies to what the existing legal framework on the topic of the rights of indigenous peoples dictates. The results show that the main international legislation on the topic is very clear in expressing that states should grant indigenous peoples access to lands and territories that have traditionally been occupied by them, as well as granting them participation in the exploitation of natural resources. The analysis of the case studies shows that there exists a tendency among states to bypass what is stipulated in the international regulations when executing renewable energy projects, as well as using the term “sustainable development” as a cover-up when violating the rights of indigenous peoples. Although the international legislation on the topic is very precise, the majority of the world’s countries have not ratified the main legally binding convention. I conclude that one reason for this could be that states would find it hard to reach environmental objectives while at the same time complying with the legislation on the rights of indigenous peoples, i.e. states face difficulties in fulfilling sustainable environmental and economic objectives with sustainable social objectives.
format Bachelor Thesis
author Bergman, Jonas
author_facet Bergman, Jonas
author_sort Bergman, Jonas
title Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
title_short Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
title_full Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
title_fullStr Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : Tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
title_sort sustainable environmental vs. sustainable social development : tendencies of carbon colonialism and green authoritarianism when implementing renewable energy strategies on indigenous peoples’ territories
publisher Högskolan Dalarna, Religionsvetenskap
publishDate 2020
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-33799
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-33799
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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