Sustainability conflicts in Coastal India: Hazards, changing climate and development discourse in Indian Sundarbans

Research output: Books and anthologiesMonographsResearch

Authors

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 disasters’ is proposed – supported by data and photographic evidence – that contests institutional disaster definition. Then it uncovers how the geopolitics of ecological governance and its hegemonic discourse dominate local policies, which in turn fail to address local socio-ecological concerns, adaptation needs and development aspirations. Absence of local vocabularies, cognitive values and socio-cultural contexts along with spatially constricted, exclusionary, top-down techno-science approaches further escalate knowledge-action gaps. Deconstruction of multiscalar conflicts between the global rhetoric and transformative postcolonial geographies offers an ethical, Southern perspective of sustainability.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationGermany
PublisherSpringer
Edition1
Number of pages245
ISBN (Print)978-3-319-63891-1
ISBN (Electronic)978-3-319-63892-8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2017

Publication series

NameAdvances in Asian Human-Environmental Research
ISSN (Print)1879-7180
ISSN (Electronic)1879-7199

    Research areas

  • Sustainability Science - Sustainable development in India, Climate change adaptation, Disaster risk reduction, Resilience, Indian Sundarbans, Climate change adaptation, Disaster risk reduction, Resilience, Indian Sundarbans