Politics of development and forced mobility : gender, indigeneity, ecology / Sutapa Chattopadhyay.
2022
HB2099
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Title
Politics of development and forced mobility : gender, indigeneity, ecology / Sutapa Chattopadhyay.
Author
ISBN
9783030939014 (electronic bk.)
3030939014 (electronic bk.)
3030939006
9783030939007
3030939014 (electronic bk.)
3030939006
9783030939007
Published
Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, 2022.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white).
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-93901-4 doi
Call Number
HB2099
Dewey Decimal Classification
307.20954
Summary
This book broadly analyzes the displacement or forced relocation of Adivasis Indigenous peoples from the Narmada Valley in India due to the construction and execution of a large development project, the Sardar Sarovar project, which has substantially transformed Adivasi lives, roles, practices, and autonomy, and increased their dependence on capital, market, unsustainable farming practices and urban jobs. Globally, Indigenous communities live within a legacy of environmental dispossession due to economic development that dismantles their mental and physical well-being and a land-based way of life. Appropriation, dispossession, and accumulation is historical and contemporary. Stories of Adivasi people illustrate the horrors of systematic marginalization, in general, and Adivasi womens reduced autonomy and economic sufficiency, in particular. Key to mention here is that decades of resistance, protests, counter-struggles, marches, direct action did not overturn bureaucratic regressions or structural and direct violence towards marginalized or resettled Adivasi people, but enabled networks of solidarity arguing their rights and access. The book does not attest to state or corporate power, but validates Adivasi agency and autonomy. Sutapa Chattopadhyay is Assistant Professor in Womens and Gender Studies and Development Studies programs at St. Francis Xavier University, Canada. Her areas of interest are gender, migrations, development justice, social movements, political ecology and Indigeneity. Currently she pursues research on migrant incarceration, borders, and autonomy in Rome, Italy. She also continues to write on Indigeneity, food sovereignty, emancipatory politics, and development justice. She is an editor of Interface and on the advisory board of ACME. She has published in Interface; ACME; Gender, Place and Culture; Population, Place and Space; Environment and Planning D; Geopolitics; and Capitalism Nature Socialism on Indigenous anti-colonial struggles, development-induced dislocation, colonial and post-colonial appropriation of bodies and nature, anarch/eco-feminist pedagogies, feminist research methodologies, migrant agency, and border politics. She is co-editor of Migration, Squatting and Radical Autonomy (with P. Mudu, 2017). .
Note
Includes index.
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Source of Description
Description based on print version record.
Series
Mobility & politics.
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Contesting Development
Chapter 3: Historical Appropriation of Land and People - in the Adivasi Heartlands of western India
Chapter 4: Everyday Lives of the Tadvis in the Narmada Valley
Chapter 5: Negotiating Development - at the interface of Power and Resistance
Chapter 6: Conclusions Gender, Nature and Development.
Chapter 2: Contesting Development
Chapter 3: Historical Appropriation of Land and People - in the Adivasi Heartlands of western India
Chapter 4: Everyday Lives of the Tadvis in the Narmada Valley
Chapter 5: Negotiating Development - at the interface of Power and Resistance
Chapter 6: Conclusions Gender, Nature and Development.