Abstract
Waterscapes with mining activities are often sites of water resource degradation and contestation. To prevent this, policy-makers deploy an increasing number of measures that purportedly align the interests of different water users. In Mongolia, mining-related protests led to the prohibition of mining in and close to rivers. However, implementation of these regulations has been slow. In this paper, we investigate why that is the case, drawing on an extended elaboration of the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework to disentangle the web of formal and informal rules, incentive structures, discourses, and other elements that characterize Mongolian miningscapes. We find that i) a combination of insufficient resources for lower-level actors, large areas to cover and high mobility of extractive operations, ii) a lack of information among implementing entities, combined with time pressure on decision-making and a lack of involvement of local actors, and iii) cultural norms and political context conditions that privilege the pursuit of private interests are key obstacles. Irrespective of these challenges, the prohibition of mining in riverbeds entrenches a social imaginary in the Mongolian governance framework that prioritizes water resources protection over resource extraction, offering a counterweight to dominant discourses that cast mining as a necessary requirement for social and economic development. Our analysis illustrates the usefulness of looking at implementation processes through the lens of mining- and waterscapes to identify how social power is embedded in social-political artifacts and impacts hydro-social outcomes. Strong discrepancies between the formal description of governance processes and interactions on the ground support the need to look at how processes play out in practice in order to understand implementation obstacles.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 112767 |
Journal | Journal of Environmental Management |
Volume | 292 |
Issue number | 15 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2021 |
Funding
The authors thank the anonymous reviewers for their valuable feedback. The first author thanks the editors of the Special Issue and the participants of the young water researchers’ workshop at IHE Delft for their comments on previous versions of this paper. She gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) for the STEER project (grant number 02WGR1425C ) under the funding measure GRoW. Daniel Karthe also thanks the German Academic Exchange Service for funding his long-term lectureship in Mongolia (grant number 91585500 ).
Funders | Funder number |
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Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst | 91585500 |
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung | 02WGR1425C |