Thesis ID: CBB399883608

Weaponizing Geography: An Environmental and Technological History of Cold War Mega-Projects in Latin America (2023)

unapi

Weaponizing Geography demonstrates the consequences of unbuilt mega-projects. It tells the untold story of how a series of high modernist Cold War projects came into being and what their proponents hoped to achieve, as well as the successes, failures, and consequences of their actions. It examines the so-called “South American Great Lakes System” (SAGLS), a geographical and environmental engineering project (1964-1973) proposed by the Hudson Institute of New York, a think tank related to the U.S. Department of Defense. With the support of influential Latin American elite members, engineers, and war strategists at this think tank sought to transform the major rivers of the continent into a series of massive interlocked, channelized, and navigable artificial reservoirs. Much like the North American Great Lakes, these waterways would provide (in theory) inexpensive riverine transportation, inexhaustible sources of hydropower, and a landscape facilitating large-scale agroindustry, mining, and counterinsurgency operations in allegedly “unexploited and unexplored” tropical regions. Weaponizing Geography focuses largely on the Chocó Development Project (CDP), a SAGLS prototype plan embraced by the Colombian government to build a pair of interconnected and power-generating artificial reservoirs in the northwestern region of this country: a strategic area bordering Panama, inhabited by disregarded indigenous and afro-descendent populations, where the SAGLS idea could be tested to deliver a low-cost interoceanic passage alternative to the Panama Canal, purportedly accomplishing nineteenth-century visions for a modern canal connecting the Atrato and San Juan rivers in Chocó. So even if —retrospectively—we now know that the most visible components of SAGLS and CDP project were never implemented, it is key to understand that for close to a decade they did exist as a conceivable strategy for modernization and securitization, performing different kinds of work for different historical actors, with specific influences and consequences (including material and territorial effects.) Following the trajectories and afterlives of these mega-projects, this dissertation illuminates intersecting histories of technology, environment, and geopolitics, offering new perspectives on Latin American–U.S. relationships during the Cold War. In doing so, it also contributes to recent scholarship in cartographic, agrarian, development, infrastructure, and counterinsurgency studies.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB399883608/

Similar Citations

Article Benjamin K. Sovacool; Katherine Lovell; Marie Blanche Ting; (November 2018)
Reconfiguration, Contestation, and Decline: Conceptualizing Mature Large Technical Systems

Article Diane M. Nelson; (2024)
Hydroelectric Chimeras and “Our” Mayan Rivers: De-inscribing Security in Guatemala

Book Christine E. Evans; Lars Lundgren; (2023)
No Heavenly Bodies: A History of Satellite Communications Infrastructure

Book Edward Jones-Imhotep; (2017)
The Unreliable Nation: Hostile Nature and Technological Failure in the Cold War

Article Martin Kalb; (2020)
Water, Sand, Molluscs: Imperial Infrastructures, the Age of Hydrology, and German Colonialism in Swakopmund, Southwest Africa, 1884-1915

Book Brooke Shilling; Paul Stephenson; (2016)
Fountains and Water Culture in Byzantium

Article Rebekah Shirley; Daniel Kammen; (June 2018)
Mundane is the New Radical: The Resurgence of Energy Megaprojects and Implications for the Global South

Thesis Jonathan M. Hill; (2018)
Powerhouse Chihuahua: Electricity, Water, and the State in the Long Mexican Revolution

Book Anne-Emanuelle Birn; Raúl Necochea López; (2020)
Peripheral Nerve: Health and Medicine in Cold War Latin America

Book Paul A. Vanden Bout; Robert L. Dickman; Adele L. Plunkett; (2023)
The ALMA Telescope

Book Peter J. Williams; (1986)
Pipelines and Permafrost: Science in a Cold Climate

Chapter Fernando Purcell; Dams and Hydroelectricity: Circulation of Knowledge and Technological Imaginaries in South America, 1945–1970

Article Moore, Aaron Stephen; (2014)
Japanese Development Consultancies and Postcolonial Power in Southeast Asia: The Case of Burma's Balu Chaung Hydropower Project

Article Nicolas Henckes; (2021)
Negotiating the limits of therapy

Article Yafeng Wang; (2022)
Feature dependence: A method for reconstructing actual causes in engineering failure investigations

Book Basañes, Federico; Uribe, Evamaria; Willig, Robert D.; (1999)
Can privatization deliver?: Infrastructure for Latin America

Article Raquel Velho; Sebastián Ureta; (2019)
Frail modernities: Latin American infrastructures between repair and ruination

Book Ashley Carse; (2014)
Beyond the big ditch: politics, ecology, and infrastructure at the Panama Canal

Book Dhan Zunino Singh; Valeria Gruschetsky; Melina Piglia; (2021)
Pensar las infraestructuras en Latinoamérica; [Thinking about infrastructures in Latin America]

Article Pedro Reynolds-Cuéllar; Diego Cerna-Aragon; Eden Medina; (April 2024)
Seeds, Dams, and Khipus: Latin America's Eclectic Recent History of Technology

Authors & Contributors
Birn, Anne-Emanuelle
Carse, Ashley
Henckes, Nicolas
Kalb, Martin
Kammen, Daniel M.
López, Raúl Necochea
Journals
Science, Technology, and Human Values
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Environment and History
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Medizinhistorisches Journal
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Publishers
The MIT Press
Cambridge University Press
New York, City University of
Duke University Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
Inter-American Development Bank
Concepts
Infrastructure
Cold War
Hydroelectric power
Water
Science and technology studies (STS)
Failure in science, technology, and medicine
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
Places
Latin America
Soviet Union
United States
Chile
Mexico
Panama
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment