Data Entry: Please note that the research database will be replaced by UNIverse by the end of October 2023. Please enter your data into the system https://universe-intern.unibas.ch. Thanks

Login for users with Unibas email account...

Login for registered users without Unibas email account...

 
The Electricity Crisis in Zambia: blackouts and social stratification in new mining towns
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3845265
Author(s) Kesselring, Rita
Author(s) at UniBasel Kesselring, Rita
Year 2017
Title The Electricity Crisis in Zambia: blackouts and social stratification in new mining towns
Journal Energy Research & Social Science
Volume 30
Pages / Article-Number 94-102
Keywords electricity, energy distribution, mining, Zambia
Abstract In Zambia, privately-owned copper mines consume more than half of the electrical energy produced. By contrast, only 22% of private households are connected to the national grid. Against this background, the paper analyses energy distribution in Zambia’s Northwestern Province, where new copper mines have opened following the hike in copper prices during the 2000’s. Unlike rural families, residents in the three new urban centres in theory have access to electricity. Since 2015, however, the country suffers from an electricity crisis partly as a result of poor rainfalls in the 2014/2015 season. In a situation of undersupply, the mine keeps unlimited access to electricity which privileges its operations and the housing areas. Daily blackouts for the rest of the town entrench existing inequalities and produce new ones. Based on long-term ethnographic research, the paper examines how electrical infrastructure and the possibility for forms of sociality relate both in the everyday and in the political discourse. I show how unequal electrical infrastructure contributes to the structuring of people into new social classes, and how, consequently, infrastructure is political from the start. By reflecting on the political and social consequences of unequal electricity supply, I provide preliminary thoughts on an energy distribution ethic.
Publisher Elsevier
ISSN/ISBN 2214-6296
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/55388/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1016/j.erss.2017.06.015
ISI-Number WOS:000411650900011
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

MCSS v5.8 PRO. 0.333 sec, queries - 0.000 sec ©Universität Basel  |  Impressum   |    
29/03/2024