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| Document Type(s): | Book Chapter |
| Book Title: | Deforestation: Social Dynamics in Watersheds and Mountain Ecosystems |
| Article/Chapter Title: | The Chipko Movement |
| Editor(s): | Ives, J; Pitt, D |
| Author(s): | Shiva, Vandana; Banyopadhyay, J |
| Religion(s): | Hinduism |
| Publisher Name: | Routledge |
| Place of Publication: | London |
| Date of Publication: | 1988 |
| Pages: | 224-41 |
| Annotation: | An overview of the history, structure and strategies of the contemporary Chipko Movement, a growing grassroots effort, comprised mostly of women and originating in the Garhwal region of Uttar Pradesh in the early 1970s, to protect forests, cultures, and livelihoods from socially and ecologically destructive approaches to development. Growing out of the Gandhian tradition of Satyagraha, the Chipko movement is the expression of an old social consciousness in a new context (p 233), which, the authors suggest, can serve as a model for resolving conflicts over the management and distribution of natural resources around the globe. |
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