Abstract
The rhetoric on development benefits of energy access often focuses on education, livelihoods and health. Using case studies of two energy access projects in India, this paper demonstrates that these claims, while true in part, are neither simple nor straightforward. It argues that pre-existing socio-cultural processes mediate the development outcomes of energy access projects. In particular, the roles of gender, socio-economic positions and the local economy are vital in understanding the links between education, livelihoods, health and energy.This paper is important for two reasons. First, working with culture as a mediator, it provides nuanced insights into relationships between energy access and three key development goals. Second, by presenting this analysis, the paper identifies a need for further research on the relationships between socio-cultural processes, development and energy access and, how by keeping these processes in mind, the benefits of energy access could be extended to less privileged social groups. This paper is based on a nine-month long ethnographic research in five villages in India’s Bihar state. Home tours, interviews, participant observations and group discussions were used to collect the data.
Highlights
A substantial body of literature argues that “access to modern energy services is fundamental to human development” ([1]:7)
The roles of gender, socio-economic positions and the local economy are vital in understanding the links between education, livelihoods, health and energy
Policy and academic discourses often take for granted that access to energy will lead to development benefits
Summary
A substantial body of literature argues that “access to modern energy services is fundamental to human development” ([1]:7). A focus on socio-cultural process provides a more nuanced understanding of the positive and negative impacts of energy access projects. Keeping this in mind, this paper investigates the socio-cultural processes that tailor the impacts of these projects in particular contexts. This paper investigates the socio-cultural processes that tailor the impacts of these projects in particular contexts It argues that these processes mediate the development outcomes of energy projects. The roles of gender, socio-economic positions (caste) and the local economy are vital in understanding the links between education, livelihoods, health and energy. This section explains why this paper focuses on three particular development outcomes, electric lights and rural areas
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