Your search found 17 records
1 Groenfeldt, D. J. 1986. Analyzing irrigation's impact in northwest India: An ethnographic approach. In Green, E. C. (Ed.), Practicing development anthropology (pp. 86-106). Boulder, CO, USA: Westview Press (Westview special studies in applied anthropology)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 306 G000 GRE Record No: H000535)
(2.52 MB)
2 Engelhardt, T. 1984. Economics of traditional smallholder irrigation systems in the semi-arid tropics of South India. Dissertation. xii, 193p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.4 G635 ENG Record No: H02642)
3 Buggi, C.; Gowda, S. G. 1987. Socio-religious value orientation of a peasant society in Karnataka: A pilot study in pre-irrigated command area. Journal of Rural Development, 6(6):609-615.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H02990)
4 Hogg, R. 1985. Settlement, pastoralism and the commons: The idealogy and practice of development in northern Kenya. Unpublished manuscript. 18p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 290 Record No: H02380)
5 Glaser, M. 1986. Minor irrigation and socio-economic change at the village level: Some findings in a beel area in Singra Upazila. In Multidisciplinary Research Team, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Water market in Bangladesh: Inefficient and inequitable? Mymensingh, Bangladesh: Bangladesh Agricultural University. pp.203-212.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.4 G584 MUL Record No: H03472)
6 Leach, E. R. 1959. Hydraulic society in Ceylon. Past and Present, 15:2-26.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.322 G744 LEA Record No: H003796)
(5.35 MB)
7 Zerner, C. 1984. Memory and ceremony: Toraja rituals of the wet-rice landscape. Paper submitted for publication?
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 360 Record No: H04107)
8 Rao, S. V. 1984. Rural labour: Case study of a Karnataka village. Economic and Political Weekly, May:766-776.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 1143 Record No: H04859)
9 Scoones, I. 1992. Wetlands in drylands: Key resources for agricultural and pastoral production in Africa. London, UK: IIED. 23p. (Dryland Network Programme issues paper no.38)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 2620 Record No: H011891)
(0.41 MB)
10 Ouédraogo, M. 2003. New stakeholders and the promotion of agro-silvo-pastoral activities in Southern Burkina Faso: False start or inexperience? London, UK: IIED. 64p. (IIED issue paper no.118)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6835 Record No: H034561)
11 Agarwal, A.; Chopra, R.; Sharma, K. (Eds.) 1982. State of India's environment 1: The first citizens’ report 1982. New Delhi, India: Centre for Science and Environment. vii, 191p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 363.7 G635 AGA Record No: H035251)
12 Sorbo, G. M. 2003. Pastoral ecosystems and the issue of scale. Ambio, 32(2):113-117.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 7016 Record No: H035450)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 363 G110 PIC Record No: H040417)
14 Geheb, Kim; Mapedza, Everisto. 2008. The political ecologies of bright spots. In Bossio, Deborah; Geheb, Kim (Eds.). Conserving land, protecting water. Wallingford, UK: CABI; Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI); Colombo, Sri Lanka: CGIAR Challenge Program on Water & Food. pp.51-68. (Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture Series 6)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G000 BOS Record No: H041593)
15 Kloos, H.; Legesse, W. (Eds.) 2010. Water resources management in Ethiopia: implications for the Nile Basin. Amherst, NY, USA: Cambria Press. 415p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G136 KLO Record No: H043016)
16 Kloos, H.; Legesse, W. (Eds.) 2010. Water resources management in Ethiopia: implications for the Nile Basin. Amherst, NY, USA: Cambria Press. 415p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G136 KLO c2 Record No: H044997)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H051479)
(0.37 MB) (376 KB)
This article argues for a reorientation of African environmental history that incorporates localized ecophilosophies, racial ecologies, and environmental justice, and posits that doing so allows us to challenge the sociocultural and ecological implications of colonial and postcolonial environmental development more rigorously in East Africa. Focusing on Kenya, I argue that environmental justice-oriented histories of economic development elevate the subjectivities, cosmologies, and experiences of rural Kenyan populations rather than reducing the environment and its resources to their instrumental qualities On the Tana River, pastoral and riverine groups such as the Pokomo and Orma suffered and challenged the exigencies of water extraction in specific ways tied to their existing relationships with the local environment. By looking at the ways rural communities in arid regions framed their environmental relationships, we can begin to appreciate the specific modalities and cosmologies through which they resisted the imposition of cash crop agriculture and water development. The article demonstrates an interdisciplinary approach utilizing Black ecologies and environmental justice frameworks that restores vitality to the rural experience of imperialism and offers more rigorous critiques of global development dogmas under racial capitalism, particularly surrounding the omnipresent threat of ecocide driven by dispossession, resource extraction, toxicity, and climate change.
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