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Sustainability Conflicts in Coastal India: Hazards, Changing Climate and Development Discourses in the Sundarbans PDF

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Advances in Asian Human-Environmental Research Aditya Ghosh Sustainability Confl icts in Coastal India Hazards, Changing Climate and Development Discourses in the Sundarbans Advances in Asian Human-Environmental Research Series Editor Prof. Marcus Nüsser, South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg, Germany Editorial Board Prof. Eckart Ehlers, University of Bonn, Germany Prof. Harjit Singh, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India Prof. Hermann Kreutzmann, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany Prof. Ken Hewitt, Waterloo University, Canada Prof. Urs Wiesmann, University of Bern, Switzerland Prof. Sarah J. Halvorson, University of Montana, USA Dr. Daanish Mustafa, King’s College, London, UK Aims and Scope The series aims at fostering the discussion on the complex relationships between physical landscapes, natural resources, and their modification by human land use in various environments of Asia. It is widely acknowledged that human-environment interactions become increasingly important in area studies and development research, taking into account regional differences as well as bio-physical, socio- economic and cultural particularities. The book series seeks to explore theoretic and conceptual reflection on dynamic human-environment systems applying advanced methodology and innovative research perspectives. The main themes of the series cover urban and rural land- scapes in Asia. Examples include topics such as land and forest degradation, gla- ciers in Asia, mountain environments, dams in Asia, medical geography, vulnerability and mitigation strategies, natural hazards and risk management concepts, environ- mental change, impacts studies and consequences for local communities. The rele- vant themes of the series are mainly focused on geographical research perspectives of area studies, however there is scope for interdisciplinary contributions. More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/8560 Aditya Ghosh Sustainability Conflicts in Coastal India Hazards, Changing Climate and Development Discourses in the Sundarbans Aditya Ghosh Institute of Ethics and Transdisciplinary Sustainability Research Leuphana University of Lüneburg Lüneburg, Lower Saxony, Germany ISSN 1879-7180 ISSN 1879-7199 (electronic) Advances in Asian Human-Environmental Research ISBN 978-3-319-63891-1 ISBN 978-3-319-63892-8 (eBook) DOI/10.1007/978-3-319-63892-8 Library of Congress Control Number: 2017950065 © Springer International Publishing AG 2018 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Cover illustration: Nomads near Nanga Parbat, 1995. Copyright © Marcus Nüsser (used with permission) Printed on acid-free paper This Springer imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland To Ma and Baba, for their relentless sacrifices and inspiration that made it possible. Foreword The coastal regions of South Asia are exposed to rising sea levels and recurring environmental hazards such as floods, cyclones, high soil erosion and land subsid- ence. These regions in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Myanmar and Sri Lanka are also variously characterised by high population densities, endangered biodiversity, sprawling urbanisation, acute poverty and poor governance – increasing the precari- ousness of future development. The study focuses on the Sundarbans, spread across the delta formed by the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna, shared between India and Bangladesh. The area is known as a globally important biodiversity hotspot with the world’s largest mangrove forest that is one of the last remaining habitats of the endangered Royal Bengal Tiger; it is also home for five million peo- ple. Most of these coastal inhabitants subsist on local natural resources and con- stantly adapt their livelihood strategies to the adverse effects of climate change and natural hazards. Taking the approach of a politicised environment, the author conceptualises the conflict-ridden negotiations between global environmental protection agendas (UNESCO World Heritage, Ramsar) and local people in a highly dynamic and frag- ile environment. Based on sound theoretical foundations and detailed empirical findings, Aditya Ghosh delivers an important contribution on the socioecological problems of the Indian Sundarbans. As someone who has had more than 15 years’ of regional interest, both as a journalist and an academic, he provides a deeper and more nuanced insight into the precarious nature of the region and its people. This book contributes to a better understanding of the entangled constellation of climatic and environmental dynamics together with the diverse socioeconomic aspirations and political power asymmetries of the stakeholders in the Sundarbans. The book addresses these issues through three steps. Firstly, the author advances our under- standing of climatic hazards, with the revelation that short-term and small-sized disasters are more devastating than normally assumed – thus countering the estab- lished institutional definitions of disasters. Secondly, he reveals how different gov- ernance regimes and development actors frame the discourse about hazards, sustainability, ecosystem conservation and climate change in the region. Finally, he unravels the global to local-level power asymmetries evident in the discourse on vii viii Foreword climate change adaptation and sustainable development. He shows how such discur- sive power struggles and hegemonies displace a locally nuanced discourse with policies in favour of a globally consensual one. This book constitutes essential reading for anyone who studies socioecological problems of the coastal areas of South Asia in general and the Sundarbans in par- ticular from a post-colonial perspective of regional development processes within the context of climate change. Heidelberg, Germany Marcus Nüsser February 2017 Preface This book is an abridged and modified version of my PhD thesis, which I completed in December 2016 at the South Asia Institute (SAI), University of Heidelberg. The research was funded by DAAD, the Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst – the German Academic Exchange Service. SAI provided a perfectly interdisciplinary atmosphere and rare academic freedom for this research. It was, however, a moral, ethical and philosophical struggle to produce a Southern perspective of the Western constructs of sustainability and climate change adapta- tion. This seemed important as Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were announced by the United Nations in 2016, to replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). I asked the villagers in the Sundarbans, if ‘sustainability’ made any sense to them. It was difficult to explain in the first place, as it did not have any equivalent term in the local language, Bengali. The subjectivities and variegated sense-making made me wonder how even local managers would define and imple- ment these objectives. At the same time, I learned how communities managed their ecologies through cultural negotiations and generational knowledge, what was con- sidered a hazard and why, how conflicts between multiple realities revealed differ- ent hegemonies at work. Legitimising diverse epistemologies, uncovering rationalities and subjectivities seemed crucial in order to construct counter- narratives to the global rhetoric of sustainable development goals. The local struggles ema- nated from high levels of poverty, livelihood insecurities, lack of access to elemen- tary healthcare, misgovernance and recurrent hazards. These daily hazards were not only environmental ones such as flooding, erosion and storms but also snakebites, tiger attacks and frequent boat capsizes. To avoid ‘epistemic violence’, shifting the goalposts seemed important. My ethi- cal dilemma, however, was associated with my position of privilege at a Western institution from where I could sympathise but hardly ally with these people or speak for them. Obligation to ‘anonymous’ research further deepened the likelihood of subjectification and objectification of the people from whom I sourced my knowl- edge. To minimise condescending truth claims that often implicate the post-colonial Other, I decided to employ case studies, storylines of people using their ‘actual’ names and places. Consent was obtained in each case. Adding faces to the narrative ix x Preface and arguments – not as ethnic posters or advertisements of research success but to depict agents in their natural settings – helps bolster the sense of place and under- standing of the region in the spirit of visual anthropology. Achieving total objectiv- ity, however, is a utopia, because all research is guided by certain viewpoints, which involve subjectivity, because in post-constructivism, facts are co-constructed and knowledge is subjective. Distinctions between academic texts and other forms of writing are getting increasingly obfuscated, as a welcome development. Authors, humanists, social and natural scientists are converging at one point, evident from growing popularity of streams such as environmental humanities. Amitav Ghosh, a noted author and a trained anthropologist from Oxford University, UK, puts it nicely: ‘If nature is to be re-imagined in such a way as to restore the human presence within it – not as preda- tor but partner – then this too must first be told as a story’ (quoted in White 2013:4– 5). I also believe that the research on human-environment relations needs to remain true to its commitment to both the humans and non-humans. Marx had proclaimed in his Thesis on Feurbach that ‘The question of whether objective truth can be attributed to human thinking is not a question of theory but is a practical question’. The objective of the exercise is to inform action, to remain embedded into reconfig- uring current and future applications instead of producing knowledge for posterity. This work attempts to remain true to both its commitments. It experiments with a language, structure and narrative that is a hybrid between academics and fiction. At the same time, it also tries to theorise practices and evolve theories that can be prac- tised – globally and locally. Certain parts of this work have been presented in seminars, apart from contribut- ing to academic and policy documents. Connections between biodiversity conserva- tion and human security were presented at the Dimensions of Political Ecology conference (Kentucky 2017), University of Kentucky, USA. Findings on risk pro- duction, governmentality and everyday disasters were presented at the Anthropology, Weather and Climate Change conference (London 2016), Royal Anthropoligical Society, The British Museum. Everyday disasters, in the wake of post-Hyago UNISDR protocol, was selected as a topic of paper at the UNFCCC’s scientific ses- sion titled Our Common Future under Climate Change (Paris 2015). The political ecology perspective on climate change adaptation was presented at the STEPS Centre, IDS Summer School, University of Sussex (Brighton 2014). The water gov- ernance regime in the Sundarbans and its role in risk production were presented at the conference titled Epistemologies of Water in Asia (Germany 2014), Cluster of Excellence, University of Heidelberg. Climate change adaptation in the Indian Sundarbans and the role of disaster risk reduction were presented at the King’s College, UCL (London 2014), and at the DEEM Workshop, University of Reading, UK. Analysis of a cyclone and its impact on the Indian Sundarbans constituted a chapter in a background paper prepared for UNISDR’s 2015 Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction. An article titled “The Indian Sundarban Mangrove Forests: History, Utilization, Conservation Strategies and Local Perception” by Ghosh et al. (2015) was published in Diversity, (7, 149–169; doi:10.3390/d7020149).

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This multidisciplinary work analyses challenges to sustainable development amidst rapidly changing climate in the world’s largest delta – the Sundarbans. Empirical evidence unpacks grounded vulnerabilities and reveals their temporal socio-economic impacts. A novel concept of ‘everyday disaster
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