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Environment in India: Sociological Perspectives

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Nature based Conflicts on. Forest, Water, Wetlands, Mineral sectors/Mines and Wild life. ... (Farmer's lack of information on growing conditions, pesticide use, the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environment in India: Sociological Perspectives


1
  • Environment in India Sociological
    Perspectives

2
Voices of many in India Focus of Environment
  • Natural Resource conflicts, Pollution,
  • Environmental movements ,
  • Nature based Conflicts on
  • Forest, Water, Wetlands, Mineral sectors/Mines
    and Wild life.

3
Forest For Whom and for What? Chipko Movement,
1973
  • Ecology is Permanent Economy- it epitomizes its
    chief concern to save forest resources from
    commercial exploitation by outside contractors
    for international markets.

4
Water Dam and the Damned Struggle against big
dams 1980s
  • Tehri in the north,
  • Silent Valley in the South,
  • Koel Karo in the east
  • Sardar Sarovar in the West

5
Critics of multipurpose river valley projects
(NVP)
  • From an economic perspective
  • the cost-benefit ratios derived by the govt. to
    justify various dams invariably overvalue
    benefits and undervalue costs.
  • From an ecological perspective
  • the high incidence of water logging and the
    submergence of forests and wildlife have been
    presented an exp of the unacceptable costs of dam
    building.

6
Struggles in the Sea
  • Artisanal fisher-folk in the Southern Kerala,
    Tamil Nadu, Andhra , Coastal Orisa

7
Mines and Misery
  • Jharkhand Movement 1990s onwards, Jharkhand
    mines and tribal displacement
  • BALCO (Orissa) 1986 (Aluminum Mines) ,
    Gandhamardhan hills and tribal displacement ,
    Movement
  • POSCO, Orissa 2007/8 (Iron ore mines)

8
Biotechnology as an Environmental Problem
  • Biotechnology and Sociology--
  • Environmental Focus Agriculture
  • The nature of Biotechnology as perceived by
    farmers and the public

9
The office of Technology Assessment (1986)
provides the definition on Biotechnology
  • Biotechnology includes any technique that uses
    living organisms or processes to make or modify
    products, to improve plants or animals, or to
    develop microorganisms for specific purposes
    such knowledge and skills will give scientists
    much greater control over biological systems,
    leading to significant improvements in the
    production of plants and animals. ..

10
Opposition to Biotechnology in IndiaBt cotton
in India Its adverse impact on agriculture
  • Monsanto, quit India" campaign in Karnataka (the
    purchase of MAHYCO )

11
what makes crop biotechnology find its roots in
India? Bt cotton
  • Whether biotechnology and genetic engineering has
    become a site for democratic imagination in India
    or
  • Whether it has entailed social environmental
    risk, impact on human health, eradication of
    hunger poverty monopolization of scientific
    technological knowledge

12
Technological culture of genetically modified
crop Bio-technology and the agency of global
  • Cotton in Indian context
  • How Bt cotton came to India
  • Opposition to Bt Cotton

13
Technology involved
  • BT (Baillus Thuringiensis)- developed by the US
    based MNCs- Monsanto to combat the American
    ballworm attack,
  • Refers to a toxin which contains a protein gene
    which is toxic to the American ballworm,
  • GEAC (Genetic Engineering Approval Committee)
    approved the commercial cultivation in India in 6
    states-

14
Opposition to Bt Cotton
  • Regions A.P. Vidarva district of Maharashtra
  • (Farmers lack of information on growing
    conditions, pesticide use, the importance of
    planting proper seeds and the earnings to be
    expected from using this technology),

15
The major arguments
  • The possibility of resistance developed by the
    pest to the Bt cotton,
  • The high cost of compliance of technology
  • The rapid spread of illegal variants of certified
    Bt cotton seeds
  • Whether the objectives are achieved through
    adoption of the technology- i.e., bio-safety and
    economic viability for the small farmers.

16
Biotechnology constructs its discourse around the
seeds which it destroys in two ways
  • It robs the seed of its regenerative capacity
    through technology and law
  • Hybridization disenables the seed from
    reproducing itself and forces the farmer to
    return to the breeder for further stock.
  • It decemanticises the seed by breaking the link
    between seed as food grain and seed as a means of
    production.
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