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Author

Chandra Muzaffar

Bio: Chandra Muzaffar is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Civil society. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 4 citations.
Topics: Civil society

Papers
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DOI
03 Jun 2014

4 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Ngoc Anh Vu1
30 Jan 2017-Voluntas
TL;DR: The Trees Movement is a broad-based citizen-led movement established to protest against Hanoi government's arbitrary decision to cut down thousands of large old trees lining the city's streets.
Abstract: There are increasing signs that the space for civil society actions is slowly opening up in Vietnam. The existing studies have linked the changes in civil society action to the changing dynamics of state–society relations in one-party-ruled Vietnam. Yet, the majority of this literature has focused on the activities of NGOs. This article fills this gap by highlighting a high-profile case of civil society activism that is not centred on NGO actions. The Trees Movement is a broad-based citizen-led movement established to protest against Hanoi government’s arbitrary decision to cut down thousands of large old trees lining the city’s streets. I use this case study to argue that citizen-led activism, an emerging form of civic engagement, is likely to play a critical role in effecting change and (re)shaping state-society relations in Vietnam. This form of activism, if sustained, will encourage a move toward more deliberative and accountable politics in the same country in the long run. I also argue that environmental activism has opened up a new arena of contestation for civil society activism in Vietnam.

30 citations

Book
12 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the analysis of emerging issues, such as land acquisition, compensation for losses, displacement and resettlement, support for livelihood development, and benefit sharing from hydropower development.
Abstract: The goal of this book is to explain the controversies related to hydropower development in Vietnam in order to make policy recommendations for equitable and sustainable development. This book focuses on the analysis of emerging issues, such as land acquisition, compensation for losses, displacement and resettlement, support for livelihood development, and benefit sharing from hydropower development. Qualitative and quantitative research methods were applied for data collection and analysis of research problems. The findings show that hydropower has significantly contributed to the stability of electricity supply and economic development of Vietnam since independence in 1945. However, the benefits of hydropower cannot be compared with the negative impacts that hydropower caused to the environment and society, including a huge loss of natural forests and bio-diversity, the conflict between the use of water to produce electricity and water needs of people downstream, dam failures, and approximately 200,000 people displaced and relocated for the construction of hydroelectric dams, of which over 90% are ethnic minorities. The majority of resettled people have no stable life after resettlement, and their living standards are increasingly more difficult than before resettlement. In practice, very few cases of resettlement due to hydropower dam construction are considered as successful examples in Vietnam. Consequences caused by hydropower development are defined by the following underlying causes. First of all, land acquisition policies, compensation for damages, displacement and resettlement in Vietnam have made significant improvement, but this situation is still not perfect. Secondly, the implementation of these policies at the local level is poor, the responsibility of local governments is not high, and local staffs’ capacity for policy implementation is weak. Very often, policy implementation is imposed by government and local authorities. There is a lack of involvement of key stakeholders except for hydropower investors and local governments. Those people whose lands are appropriated do not have sufficient rights and opportunities to participate in making decisions related to land acquisition, compensation, displacement and resettlement. Consequently, most of resettlement areas are located in difficult areas, with narrow land and poor soil quality and compensation is not adequate to sustain their lives and restore their livelihoods. Thus, the study results reflect that the construction of hundreds of hydropower dams has caused many negative consequences for the environment and society, especially for displaced and resettled people. Globally, the Vietnam example shows that these problems occur in most hydroelectric dam construction, in most regions, with dams of different sizes—from large-scale to small-scale hydropower dams. These problems continue to occur and last for many years, as there is no solution to solve these problems efficiently. The government of Vietnam, investors, and society do not have sufficient capacity and effective solutions to solve existing problems caused by hydropower dam construction. If the government of Vietnam continues investing in hydropower development, the burden to environment and society will become more severe than it might be possible to cure. Hydropower development can be equitable and sustainable only when it produces benefits that are shared equitably to displaced people and effectively allocated to rectify the consequences that it causes to the environment and society.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an in-depth empirical account of the processes through which a local NGO in one-party ruled Vietnam orchestrates community mobilization to improve policy delivery response to the poor, arguing that by taking advantage of their embedded relation into the state, working within and through bureaucratic structures, manipulating available structural links, as well as strategizing around both formal and informal channels of activism, Vietnamese NGOs are seeking to carve out more room for themselves to manoeuvre in critical actions.
Abstract: There is a significant lacuna in the literature on civil society activism in authoritarian contexts. This research addresses this gap by providing an innovative conceptual framework that draws upon relational approach to civil society and mainstream social movement theories. The research focuses on legitimacy, autonomy as well as formality and informality as defining characteristics of civil society activism. In the light of this framework, the paper provides an in-depth empirical account of the processes through which a local NGO in one-party ruled Vietnam orchestrates community mobilization to improve policy delivery response to the poor. This paper argues that by taking advantage of their embedded relation into the state, working within and through bureaucratic structures, manipulating available structural links, as well as strategizing around both formal and informal channels of activism, Vietnamese NGOs are seeking to carve out more room for themselves to manoeuvre in critical actions.

17 citations

01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a Table of Table of Contents of a Declaration of International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks (TOWNSIGHT) and acknowledgements and acknowledgements.
Abstract: ..........................................................................iii Declaration.........................................................................v Acknowledgements............................................................. vi Table of

15 citations