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The Routledge International Handbook of Himalayan Environments, Development and Wellbeing: Routledge International Handbooks

Editat de Ben Campbell, Mary Cameron, Tanka Subba
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 ian 2025
With contributions by over 70 leading scholars from across the social sciences, humanities and natural sciences, The Routledge International Handbook of Himalayan Environments, Development and Wellbeing explores the interrelationships that have emerged from environmental changes, development endeavors, and individual and community wellbeing. This handbook covers the entire Himalayas, from the Indian Himalayan region in the east to Bhutan, Nepal, Tibet (TAR), India, and the Gilgit-Baltistan region in the west.
The shifting grounds of relationships between peoples, livelihoods, and territories affected by global warming require new ways of thinking, and new kinds of politics than the sovereignties of idealised European nation states. Divided into three distinctive sections (Environments, Developments and Wellbeings), this handbook brings together engaging accounts of the socio-cultural diversity and cross-fertilization so characteristic of the Himalayan region that have emerged from field research conducted in close interaction with communities and people experiencing and responding to climatic and socio-economic transformation. Across over 50 chapters, the handbook’s contributors explore people’s creative ways for understanding, adapting, and seeking wellbeing in environmental relations and development possibilities.
This handbook will inform interested scholars, students, stakeholders and the public about the shifting grounds of relationships between Himalayan peoples, livelihoods, and territories affected by global warming and development politics and processes. Lessons about learning from Indigenous and local peoples, about governance of forests and water, and of grassroots conservation practices from the Himalayan region can help inform global networks of researchers and practitioners.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032586403
ISBN-10: 1032586400
Pagini: 690
Ilustrații: 150
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge International Handbooks

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Academic, Postgraduate, and Undergraduate Advanced

Cuprins

Dedication  List of figures  List of tables  Preface  Acknowledgements  List of contributors  Acronyms and abbreviations  Handbook Introduction  Part One: Environments  Introduction: Storytelling Social Ecologies of Change  1. Forest Change and Human-Forest Interactions in the Himalaya  2. The Role of Historical Ecology to Assess Risks to Livelihood in the Himalayas from Climate Warming  3. A Historical Case Study in Women-led Socio-Ecological Innovation: How Gender and Environment Came to Matter in 15th Century Tibet (and Now)  4. High-Mountain Farming and Interacting Processes of Change in Ladakh Over the Last 30–40 Years: the Case of Hemis-Shukpa-Chan  5. Digital Infrastructures, Practices and Social Agency on the Trail to Everest  6. The Translocal Sherpa from Iconic Everest to Symbolic New York: Senses of Belonging and Connecting in Migration  7. Territories for Protecting a “Pristine Nature”: National Parks in the Himalayas, New Places of Power and Tension  8. Community Conserved Areas in Northeast India and their Role in Addressing Human-Wildlife Conflict  9. An Environment of One’s Choice: Community, Ecology, and Tourism in Arunachal Pradesh  10. Living with Landslides in Sindhupalchok: Mapping Local Knowledge and Strategies in the Context of the Federal Decentralising Era in Nepal  11. Commoning, Conservation and Mapping in Garo Hills, Northeast India  12. Marrying Glaciers: Viewing Human-Nature Relationship Through the Lens of Political Ecology in the Western Himalayas  13. Mi Mayin (Other-Than-Humans) in the Bhutan Lowlands and Highlands: Agency, Affect, and Annexation  14. Tracing the Agrarian History of the Sub-Himalayan Forest Frontiers  15. Farming Systems, Food Security, and Contemporary Climate Issues in Nepal  16. Resilience in Shangri-La  17. Himalayan Connections in Lunana and Limi: Baselines for Climate Change Perception in Two ‘Remote’ Communities in Bhutan and Nepal  18. Climate Change Adaptation in Nepal: Livelihood, Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge & Practices, and Climate Science  19. JaDibuti, Plants, Genetic Resources: Conversations among Ayurveda Practitioners, Conservationists, and Plant Scientists on Traditional Medical Knowledge and Biodiversity Conservation in Nepal  Part Two: Developments  The Many Faces of Development: An Introduction  20. Development, Displacement, Rehabilitation and Environment in Northeast India  21. Silent Dis-possession of Water in Communal Irrigation at the Foothills of the Himalayas  22. Thulo Maanche: Implications for Development, Equality, and Democracy in Nepal  23. In-between Mobilities: Risks and Uncertainty in Labor Migration from Nepal  24. Biogas in Nepal: A Socio-Technical Perspective of Energy Innovation  25. Kisan Dharma: A Worldview for Conservation of Natural Resources and Livelihood Security in Nepal  26. Black Cardamom and Crisis in Hypercolonial Kalimpong  27. The Assam-Bengal Railways and Socio-Spatial Changes in the Indian Himalayan Region  28. “What road? I built it myself on my way here.” Roads, Wars, and the Infrastructure of Citizenship in the Indian Himalayas  29. Building Capacity, Not Infrastructure: Lessons from Hydropower Development in Nepal  30. From Yam to Sponge: Recent Controversies around Nepal’s Sovereignty, Territory and Hydropower  31. Dam(n)ed If You Do, Dam(n)ed If You Don’t: Dams, Development and Contestations in Kinnaur, Western Himalayas  32. Rapid Urbanization and its Consequences: A Case Study of Bharatpur, Nepal  33. Rethinking the Himalayan Megaproject: Rainwater Harvesting and the Decentralized Alternative to Kathmandu’s Urban Resource Crunch  34. Modernity, Development, and Waste Management in Northeast India  35. Anthropology of State: Images and Practices of Inclusive Governance in Nepal  36. Geopolitics over Development in Pakistan’s Karakoram Mountains  37. Gender and Sustainable Development in the Himalayas: People, Power, and Possibilities  38. Women as Neoliberal Development Subjects: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective on Development in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan  Part Three: Wellbeings  Introduction: Culture, Place, and Wellbeings  39. Revisiting Mental Health Help-Seeking in the Himalaya: Shifting Ecologies of Care in Post-Earthquake Nepal  40. Sowa Rigpa and the State in India’s Himalayan Borderlands  41. Precarity and Wellbeing: Pandemic, Food Systems, and Health Ecologies in Dolpo  42. Heterogeneity of Institutionalizing Sowa Rigpa Education in Nepal Himalaya  43. Ayurveda and the COVID-19 Pandemic in Nepal  44. Putting People at the Center of Solutions: Embracing Human-centered Design Thinking and Approaches for Developing Menstrual Health Interventions in Nepal  45. Living Homes among the Raji and Raute of Nepal  46. The Truths of Dispossession in the Western Himalaya  47. Global Population Politics in Nepal: From a “Small, Happy Family” to a “Smart Life”  48. Addressing Dalit Wellbeing through Counter Ritual  49. Of Ploughmen and Drummers: Dalit Consciousness in Nepali-Language Literature  50. Food Intake, Activity Patterns, and Nutritional Status Among Nepali Hindu and Buddhist Sherpa Women: A Biocultural Perspective  51. Nettle Stew and Danger Momos: Himalayan Culinary Innovation from the Diaspora  52. Toward Holistic Well-being: Gross National Happiness and Alternative Futures in Bhutan  53. Rethinking Museums in Places of Lived Heritage  54. Seeking Wellbeing through Song: Dohori Singers’ Everyday World-making  Index

Notă biografică

Mary Cameron was Professor of Anthropology and Director of Gender Studies at Florida Atlantic University and Auburn University, USA, from 1992-2021. She received three Fulbright grants; alumni, leadership and teaching awards; and numerous other grants. Her research explores Ayurvedic medicine, human-nature relations, and gender and caste. She authored Three Fruits: Nepali Ayurvedic Doctors on Health, Nature, and Social Change (2019) and the award-winning On the Edge of the Auspicious: Gender and Caste in Nepal (1998).
Tanka B. Subba, former Professor of Anthropology at North-Eastern Hill University, served as the second Vice-Chancellor of Sikkim University. He received awards like the Homi Bhabha Fellowship (Mumbai), R.P. Chanda Centenary Medal (Asiatic Society, Kolkata), DAAD Guest professorship at the Free University of Berlin, and Baden-Wuerttemberg Fellowship at Heidelberg University. He has authored/edited 18 books and over 80 articles on the Eastern Himalayas. He is currently Visiting Professor at IIT Gandhinagar.
Ben Campbell is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology, Durham University, UK. He traveled from 1976 into Himalayan spaces between Kashmir, Nepal and Darjeeling, starting his research career learning Tamang in Nepal in 1988. He directs an MA program on Sustainability, Energy and Development, and his book about the impact of nature conservation on indigenous environmental knowledge and practice in a Tamang-speaking community is Living Between Juniper and Palm: Nature, Culture and Power in the Himalayas (2013).

Descriere

With contributions by over 70 leading scholars from across the social sciences, humanities and natural sciences, this handbook explores the interrelationships that have emerged from environmental changes, development endeavors, and individual and community wellbeing.