Protests against hydroelectric plants may not have attracted as much attention as those against open-cast mining, but names such as Brazil’s Belo Monte have made headlines beyond the region, and they have been widespread enough to prompt the creation of a Latin America-wide network of ‘movements against dams’ because of their perceived — and sometimes evident — social and environmental impacts. Perhaps more than the anti-mining protests, those against ‘dams’ (meaning hydroelectric projects) have been able to influence governments, if not entirely as much as protesters have demanded.
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