Back to Search Start Over

Communities at Risk for Mobilization: Neoliberal Governance and the (un)Contentious Politics of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Rural Illinois.

Authors :
Vogel, Kealie D.
Johnson, McKenzie F.
Sveinsdóttir, Anna G.
Source :
Journal of Rural Studies; Apr2023, Vol. 99, p134-143, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

An abundant literature has developed to examine the conditions under which contentious opposition emerges to oil pipeline development. In this article, we compare the process to site and permit two pipelines in Illinois – Enbridge's Southern Access Extension Pipeline (SAX) and Dakota Access' Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). Landowners mobilized against SAX but not DAPL despite demonstrable opposition to both projects. Moreover, DAPL generated organized resistance from landowners in neighboring Iowa. We thus seek to explain non-mobilization in a community otherwise at risk for mobilization. Drawing on in-depth empirical data, we argue that the lack of visible resistance to DAPL in Illinois is a consequence of the neoliberalized regulatory landscape in which landowners are embedded. Unless able to demonstrate that pipeline projects generate specific economic grievances – which was possible for SAX but not DAPL – landowners perceive themselves as having no capacity to resist. An inability to leverage economic grievances or noneconomic attachments as grounds for opposition forces acquiescence to energy development. Ultimately, this case seeks to assess how state-level regulatory dynamics help enable or constrain social mobilization. Our research contributes to scholarship examining the impact of fossil fuel infrastructure expansion on rural communities and raises important questions about the capacity of such communities to navigate energy (infrastructure) development in the ongoing energy transition. • Rural areas face increased energy development in the energy transition. • We compare reactions to the siting and permitting of two oil pipelines in Illinois. • Illinois landowners differed in their ability to oppose distinct pipeline projects. • Neoliberal regulation disempowers landowners and constraints social mobilization. • A just energy transition depends on equitable participation in energy governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07430167
Volume :
99
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Rural Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162762393
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2023.02.013