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SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Gov 1255: Politics of India Prof Prerna Singh
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Social Movements Environmental Movements Women’s Movements Sexual Minority Politics (Guest lecture by Marcus Elridge)
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Environmental Movements Forest Resources Water Resources
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Conflict over Forest Resources Chipko (Hug the Trees) Movement in the Central Himalayas in 1973
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Chipko Movement
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Conflict over Forests Chipko (Hug the Trees) Movement Representative of wide spectrum of forest- based conflicts Traced to establishment of the Indian forest department in 1864. This was a watershed: – Political – Social – Ecological
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Conflict over Forests Intensified in post-Independence years because of new ecological dimension – dwindling forests Popular movements focus on 2 issues: – Return of control of forests to community. State must withdraw. – Contrast between the subsistence orientation of villagers and the commercial orientation of the state.
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Conflict over Water Big Dams Nehru’s “temples of modern India” Three Critiques of Big Dams: Economic critique: States invariably overvalue benefits & undervalue costs Ecological critique: High incidence of water logging & wholesale submergence of large tropical forests and precious wildlife & fishlife Social critique: Displacement of millions of poor villagers from their ancestral homelands without adequate consultation or compensation
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Narmada Bachao Andolan/ Save the Narmada Campaign
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Leader of the Narmada Bachao Andolan: Medha Patkar
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Critiques of the Narmada Dams by the NBA that the project has been conceived without adequate participation from the people who are going to be affected; that many dams are not viable solutions to many of the problems (power, drinking water, flood control, irrigation) they set out to solve, and that there needs to be a greater emphasis on the search for alternative solutions from all concerned (Government, NGOs, people); that the construction and planning of many dams has disrupted (and will potentially disrupt) the lives of millions of people without just and adequate compensation
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Environmental Movements Forest - Chipko Movement Water - Narmada Bachao Andolan Gandhian Social Movements
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Demonstrations & Satyagrahs
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Peaceful Response to Police Repression
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Fasts
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Jal Samadhi/ Water Burial
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Women’s Movements No single movement On diverse issues Traditional focus: – Women’s education – Widow remarriage New focus – Alcoholism – Physical Abuse by Husbands – Inflation – Environment (Chipko) – Dalit issues
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Women’s Movements Early Women’s Movements: – Movement against Dowry
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Movement against Dowry
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Women’s Movements Early Women’s Movements: – Campaign against Dowry – Campaign against Rape
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Women’s Movements Early Women’s Movements: – Campaign against Dowry – Campaign against Rape Features of Early Women’s Movements: – Popular support – Legislative successes
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Women’s Movements Later Women’s Movements: – Critiques from sections of traditionalist society Success of early women’s movements Rise of religious fundamentalism – Pro-sati movements – “Real woman” vs. Feminists
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