Abstract
River modifications through hydropower dams and other infrastructure have far-reaching economic, ecological and social effects that are viewed in highly contrasting ways depending on underlying narratives. As part of a Euro-African research consortium funded by the European Commission we studied pathways for sustainable river basin management in the Omo-Turkana basins in Ethiopia and Kenya. Based on a literature review, stakeholder workshops, targeted interviews and considering our own positionality, we identified underlying narratives related to (a) economic transformation and modernization, (b) indigenous rights and (c) nature conservation, which were all connected through water, energy, food and ecosystems within a (d) landscape nexus. Yet, we also identified a (e) living museum narrative suggesting that international advocacy for indigenous rights and nature conservation is a means through which Western societies want to preserve African societies in an “undeveloped” state. National governments use this narrative to silence external critique, while the tourism industry promotes it to advertise visits to pastoralist tribes. This narrative reveals powerful, yet largely ignored hindrances for collaborative projects resulting from cultural and historical biases in Euro-African collaborations. Based on our analysis, we argue that international research projects in sustainability sciences need to increase the transparency of open and hidden narratives that influence research directions and power relationships between scientific partners, also those using mostly technically-driven approaches. We emphasize that African landscapes are not to be viewed as living museums, and collaborative research should be based on fairness, respect, care, and honesty to allow for multiple narratives that underlie research.
Highlights
Infrastructure development is at the top of the African development agenda and a “hot topic” for research projects (Enns 2018)
We identified five narratives consisting of multiple elements that are visible at different scales and influence the perspectives and actions of different actors (Table 1)
The first three narratives are largely in line with the three categories identified by Turton (2011): The economic transformation and modernization narrative is strongest on national scales and gives the highest priority to infrastructure development and export-oriented agriculture
Summary
Infrastructure development is at the top of the African development agenda and a “hot topic” for research projects (Enns 2018). It is increasingly accepted that narratives, defined as widely understood streams of argumentation and meaning-making, play a strong role in the framing of research on development and sustainability transitions (Roe 1991; Luederitz et al 2017). It remains poorly understood how international scientific projects are influenced by narratives and how this shapes collaborative scientific approaches. We aim to reveal the most dominant narratives that influence Euro-African research collaborations, using as one example our work on the sectoral nexus of water, energy and food (WEF Nexus) in the Omo-Turkana basins in Ethiopia and Kenya, funded by the European Commission (EC)
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