â[T]he chapters in this book are very cogently argued, and combine to create a coherent whole. They raise important questions, relevant not only to India but also to many other countries in the world.â - Wolfgang Hoeschele, <i>International Politics</i>
â<i>Agrarian Environments</i> makes a pathbreaking theoretical contribution. . . .â - Brian Caton, <i>The Journal of Asian Studies</i>
â[A] stimulating and conceptually sophisticated critique of romanticized populist discourse on indigenous communities, women and environmental/agrarian management. . . . [T]he volume is likely to be of great interest and value to anyone with an interest in South Asian studies, development, environmental issues, gender or community-based resource management.â - Sarah Jewitt, <i>The Journal of Peasant Studies</i>
[E]xtremely rich, both empirically and theoretically. . . . I cannot recommend it highly enough." - Ajantha Subramanian, <i>American Ethnologist</i>
âThis fine piece of interdisciplinary work attempts a fundamental reformulation of human-nature relationship. . . . Students of south Asia will find this book extremely rewarding. Given its theoretical profundity, it is a must read for all those having an interest in agrarian-environmental studies.â - Manish K. Thakur<i>, Journal of Development Studies</i>
â<i>Agrarian Environments</i> is a volume of historically and empirically informed essays that represents a new generation of scholarship that promises to reshape the fields of agrarian and environmental studies. By confronting some of the received wisdoms that have separated the study of agriculture from that of the environment, this book opens up a whole range of new and refreshing questions that will be of relevance to scholars and policymakers in all parts of the world.ââAkhil Gupta, author of <i>Postcolonial Developments: Agriculture in the Making of Modern India</i>
âThis volume brings a remarkable maturity of vision to the study of the environmental history and politics of India. Departing from the tired nature/culture dichotomy, it offers a fresh approach that situates the environment, agriculture, and politics within a single field. Our understanding of the politics of Indian environment and the academic field of environmental studies will never be the same after <i>Agrarian Environments</i>.ââGyan Prakash, Princeton University
â<i>Agrarian Environments</i> makes a pathbreaking theoretical contribution. . . .â
- Brian Caton, Journal of Asian Studies
â[A] stimulating and conceptually sophisticated critique of romanticized populist discourse on indigenous communities, women and environmental/agrarian management. . . . [T]he volume is likely to be of great interest and value to anyone with an interest in South Asian studies, development, environmental issues, gender or community-based resource management.â
- Sarah Jewitt, The Journal of Peasant Studies
â[T]he chapters in this book are very cogently argued, and combine to create a coherent whole. They raise important questions, relevant not only to India but also to many other countries in the world.â
- Wolfgang Hoeschele, International Politics
âThis fine piece of interdisciplinary work attempts a fundamental reformulation of human-nature relationship. . . . Students of south Asia will find this book extremely rewarding. Given its theoretical profundity, it is a must read for all those having an interest in agrarian-environmental studies.â
- Manish K. Thakur, Journal of Development Studies
[E]xtremely rich, both empirically and theoretically. . . . I cannot recommend it highly enough."
- Ajantha Subramanian, American Ethnologist
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Arun Agrawal is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Yale University. He is the author of Greener Pastures: Politics, Markets, and Community among a Migrant Pastoral People, also published by Duke University Press.
K. Sivaramakrishnan is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Washington and author of Modern Forests: Statemaking and Environmental Change in Colonial Eastern India.