1st Edition
Andean States and the Resource Curse Institutional Change in Extractive Economies
Part 1: Introduction
1. A Curse over the Andes? The Resource Curse Approach and Institutional Change in the Andean Region
Bettina Schorr and Gerardo Damonte
Part 2: Empirical Studies
2. Fiscal Reforms and Institutional Changes in the Andean Region: Revenues Volatility and Unequal Distribution of Regional Income
Juan Pablo Jiménez
3. Cash Transfers as Citizen’ Dividend of the Resource Boom: Opportunities and Challenges of Social Protection in Bolivia
Pablo Evia Salas
4. Growing under the Shadow of Oil: Institutionalizing the Mining Sector in Ecuador Between 2002 and 2019
Paúl Cisneros
5. Hybrid Institutions: Institutionalizing Practices in the Context of Extractive Expansion
Gerardo Damonte
6. Prior Consultation to Halt the Resource Curse? Potentials and Pitfalls of a Participatory Innovation in Peru and its Implications for the Andean Countries
Riccarda Flemmer
7. The Curse Among Citizens: Corruption, Democracy and Citizen Participation in the Andean Region
Daniel E. Moreno Morales
8. Towards New Rules for Political Transparency: Lessons from Anti-corruption Initiatives in Peru and Chile
Bettina Schorr
9. Between Environmental Subsystem Change and Extractive Regime Resilience: Beyond the Apparent Development of Chilean Environmental Institutions (1990−2019)
Antoine Maillet and Sebastián Carrasco
10. Strengthening or Weakening Environmental Institutions? Chile and the Establishment and Use of Environmental Courts in an Extractive Economy
Violeta Rabi and Fernando Campos
11. New Institutions, Old Practices: The Weakening of the New Environmental Control Institutions in Peru
Maritza Paredes and Lorena Figueroa
12. How to Institutionalize Sustainability? Analyzing the Enforcement of reparación integral and Environmental Law in the Hydrocarbon Sector in Ecuador
Teresa Bornschlegl
13. Changes to the Environmental Monitoring Institutions for the Mining Sector in San Juan, Argentina
Julieta Godfrid
Part 3: Conclusions and Road Ahead
14. Institutional Change in Extractive Economies: A Research Agenda from the Andes
Bettina Schorr and Gerardo Damonte
Biography
Gerardo Damonte is a professor of the Department of Social Sciences at Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP). He holds a PhD in anthropology from Cornell University. Currently, he acts as a member of the trAndeS Executive Committee and he is affiliated with the Development Analysis Group (GRADE) based in Lima. His research addresses socio-environmental issues in Latin America, particularly the social dynamics linked to global extractive development.
Bettina Schorr holds a PhD in political science from the Department of International Relations and Foreign Policy Analysis of Universität zu Köln, Germany. Her research interests include social inequalities and sustainable development, institutional change and dynamics of social conflicts (contentious politics). Currently, she is a lecturer at the Institute for Latin American Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, and the program director of trAndeS – Postgraduate Program on Social Inequalities and Sustainable Development in the Andean Region.






