Graduation Year

2025

Date of Submission

4-2025

Document Type

Campus Only Senior Thesis

Degree Name

Bachelor of Arts

Department

Government

Reader 1

Professor Hicham Bou Nassif

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@2025RichardMBrutto

Abstract

As the global energy transition accelerates, the governance of renewable resources presents new challenges traditionally associated with fossil fuel wealth. This thesis examines whether the future of Namibia’s large-scale solar energy development could replicate the political, economic, and social vulnerabilities known as the resource curse. Using Namibia’s unique postcolonial context as a focal point, the study evaluates the structural conditions under which renewable energy abundance could exacerbate inequality, institutional decay, and unrest. Through a thorough theoretical framework, comparative case studies of Nigeria, Venezuela, Botswana, and Chile, and an in-depth risk assessment specific to Namibia’s solar ambitions, the analysis reveals that renewable resources are not inherently immune to the dynamics that have destabilized resource-rich states. The findings underscore that governance quality – particularly in managing land rights, revenue distribution, political accountability, and inclusive growth – will determine whether Namibia’s solar boom becomes a foundation for equitable development or a source of renewed instability. The thesis concludes with a series of detailed policy recommendations aimed at ensuring that Namibia’s energy transition fosters resilience rather than reproducing patterns of exclusion and volatility. In doing so, it contributes to the broader debate on how the green transition must be governed to avoid replicating the failures of the extractive age.

This thesis is restricted to the Claremont Colleges current faculty, students, and staff.

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