Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/3289
Title: Human–wildlife conflicts in the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve and the politics of forest conservation
Authors: Sen, Amrita
Keywords: Forest notifications
Human–wildlife conflicts
Neoliberalism
Politics
Sundarbans
Issue Date: Dec-2019
Publisher: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, Kolkata
Series/Report no.: Vol.46;No.4
Abstract: The aim of this paper is to identify the politics of forest conservation—processes through which formal stewardship methods are legally enforced circumventing customary community rights to the forests. Drawing on an ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve of West Bengal, this paper discusses the ways in which such bureaucratic provisions of forest conservation shapes ideologies about human–wildlife conflicts in India. The paper draws on empirical lessons and provides observations on the different kinds of forest notifications and their impacts on the customary rights of the forest-dependent communities in the Sundarbans. Although it has been widely established that forest conservation adversely impacts local livelihoods and results in dispossession from subsistence resources, it is indeed imperative to understand that in legitimising forested landscapes as ‘protected’ and inviolate, survival of different communities is also at stake.
Description: Amrita Sen, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur, West Bengal, 721302, India
p.321-333
Issue Editor – Manisha Chakrabarty
URI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40622-019-00224-7
https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/3289
ISSN: 0304-0941 (print version) ; 2197-1722 (electronic version)
Appears in Collections:Issue 4, December 2019

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