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Threats to Power: Methane Extraction in Rwanda


About This Event

At the border of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo sits Lake Kivu, an infamous freshwater lake whose scenic beauty conceals vast stores of methane and carbon dioxide. On its shores, internationally financed companies, in partnership with the Rwandan state, have built the world’s only dissolved-methane-to-electricity projects. In this talk, Kristin Doughty will talk about her forthcoming book Threats to Power (MIT Press), which situates these projects within the long shadow of Rwanda’s post-genocide reconstruction, asking how a lake came to be understood as an existential danger in a region shaped by devastating human violence. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted with engineers, government officials, and communities around Kivu, this project examines efforts to transform methane from threat to resource—and what these efforts reveal about the exercise of contemporary forms of power. Bringing energy into conversation with carceral geography and war ecologies, Doughty traces how a dangerous gas becomes a tool of national repair, uncovering the fraught relationship between technological promise, sovereign power, and the lived realities of those who dwell at the lake’s edge.

On day two, Doughty will also visit a graduate class (ANT 711) to discuss the book with students.

Featured Guests

  • Kristin Doughty, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Rochester
  • Saida Hodžić, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Cornell University

Co-sponsors

Department of Anthropology

April 9, 2026, noon to April 10, 2026, 1 p.m.

500 Hall of Languages

LLC39: War Ecologies


Audience: Open to the Public

Host: Syracuse University

Category: Lecture


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