This paper aims to re-evaluate the Chipko movement (1973-1981), a forest protection movement in the Uttarakhand hill region in northern India, which became widely known throughout the world through its image of local people hugging trees. Although the Chipko movement became famous as a good example of the “environmentalism of the poor” in the 1980s, it began to be criticised after the 1990s as the movement ended in failure due to the fact that the local people’s “true” desire to develop the local economy by using the forest’s resources was denied by the movement’s achievement of a total ban on commercial logging. Moreover, some scholars have stressed that the prohibition of commercial deforestation was not the outcome of the Chipko movement...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...
India has the second-largest tribal population after Africa. Most of them are greatly dependent on f...
This paper is an attempt to critically survey the movement for Joint Forest Management(JFM) in India...
This paper aims to re-evaluate the Chipko movement (1973-1981), a forest protection movement in the ...
This study examines the contemporary social impact of the Chipko Andolan, a grassroots environmental...
During the 1970s, the Chipko movement mobilised popular opposition to commercial forestry in the Ind...
In the 19th century British colonial administrators in India took control of vast areas of forestlan...
The Chipko movement started in March 1974 when women from Reni village in Uttarakhand (India) hugged...
This research seeks to recontextualize the understanding of the ways women resist power structures t...
Guha Ramachandra, The unquiet woods (Twentieth Anniversary Edition): Ecological Change and Peasant ...
This Talking Points document revisits the communities surrounding Nanda Devi, where the Chipko movem...
Although the Chipko movement is practically non-existent in its region of origin it remains one of t...
In India, the Indian Forest Acts of 1865 and 1878 transferred the ownership of all forest land and i...
This article examines the continuities and discontinuities between the Chipko ecological movement an...
This study focuses on some of the major issues in relation to popular thinking about the theory of s...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...
India has the second-largest tribal population after Africa. Most of them are greatly dependent on f...
This paper is an attempt to critically survey the movement for Joint Forest Management(JFM) in India...
This paper aims to re-evaluate the Chipko movement (1973-1981), a forest protection movement in the ...
This study examines the contemporary social impact of the Chipko Andolan, a grassroots environmental...
During the 1970s, the Chipko movement mobilised popular opposition to commercial forestry in the Ind...
In the 19th century British colonial administrators in India took control of vast areas of forestlan...
The Chipko movement started in March 1974 when women from Reni village in Uttarakhand (India) hugged...
This research seeks to recontextualize the understanding of the ways women resist power structures t...
Guha Ramachandra, The unquiet woods (Twentieth Anniversary Edition): Ecological Change and Peasant ...
This Talking Points document revisits the communities surrounding Nanda Devi, where the Chipko movem...
Although the Chipko movement is practically non-existent in its region of origin it remains one of t...
In India, the Indian Forest Acts of 1865 and 1878 transferred the ownership of all forest land and i...
This article examines the continuities and discontinuities between the Chipko ecological movement an...
This study focuses on some of the major issues in relation to popular thinking about the theory of s...
After about a hundred years of exclusive government control, forests in India are now being increasi...
India has the second-largest tribal population after Africa. Most of them are greatly dependent on f...
This paper is an attempt to critically survey the movement for Joint Forest Management(JFM) in India...