Carceral修复

K. Doughty
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文基于2016-2019年的人种学田野调查,研究了卢旺达/刚果民主共和国边境基伍湖的甲烷开采作业,以此作为理解非洲能源未来如何在战后重建的国家项目中被想象和实施的一个视角。2005年,科学家们提出,湖中溶解的甲烷可能在本世纪内饱和。这刺激了国家支持的项目,在防止自然灾害的同时,利用甲烷来满足卢旺达不断增长的电力需求。目前有两家公司正在建造和运营以甲烷为燃料的发电厂。文章认为,这些能源项目是卢旺达社会修复整体架构的一个组成部分,它们再现并产生了各种形式的囚禁和诱捕,这对于理解种族灭绝后一代人的“监禁修复”的生活政治至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carceral Repair
This article, based on ethnographic fieldwork in 2016–2019, examines methane extraction operations in Lake Kivu on the Rwanda/DRC border as a lens into understanding how energy futures in Africa are imagined and enacted within national projects of post-war reconstruction. In 2005, scientists suggested that the lake’s dissolved methane risked oversaturation within the century. This spurred state-backed projects to simultaneously prevent a natural disaster and harness the methane to meet Rwanda’s rising electrification needs. Two companies are currently building and operating methane-fuelled power plants. The article suggests that these energy projects, an integral part of the overall architecture of social repair in Rwanda, reproduce and generate forms of captivity and entrapment that are central to understanding the lived politics of ‘carceral repair’, a generation after genocide.
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