The human use of nature is a polarizing topic in India and across the globe, often perceived as contradictory to traditional exclusionary conservation. However, India’s natural landscapes serve as important sources of biological resources for many communities. This collection of case studies on sustainable use practices throughout India aims to identify the policies, management strategies, and knowledge contexts that contribute to resource use without damaging biological diversity.
Through a diverse array of personal accounts, stories and photographs from the field, and ongoing research studies across biogeographic zones, readers will connect with academics, practitioners, managers, and policy analysts who challenge us to rethink the conservation paradigm. These chapters provide a reflection on the history of conservation and sustainable use in India and illuminate a path towards a local and global future in which biodiversity and human well-being go hand in hand.
The wide variety of authors in this book reflects the broad audience this book will be of interest to, from students studying environmental conservation and sustainability to researchers, practitioners, and policymakers who work in the field and seek to learn about successful sustainable use systems and resulting lessons that have widespread application. This book will appeal to readers interested in the areas of environment sciences, biodiversity management, sustainable development, developmental studies, forestry, wildlife and protected area management, public policy, environmental policy, and governance.
Author(s): Anita Varghese, Meera Anna Oommen, Mridula Mary Paul, Snehlata Nath
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 201
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Figures
List of Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
1 An introduction to sustainable use: And its contribution to biodiversity conservation in India
2 Sustainable use and biodiversity conservation: When the twain shall meet!
PART I Governance
3 The governance of sustainable use: Historical legacy and contemporary deployment
4 Small islands, big lessons: Critical insights on sustainable fisheries from India’s coral atolls
PART II Enterprises
5 Ensuring sustainable harvests through market-based tools and community-based organizations: A practitioner’s perspective
6 Sustainable use of wild medicinal plant resources: Developing field methods for sustainable collection and direct market linkages
PART III Community knowledge
7 The pig and the turtle: An ecological reading of ritual and taboo in ethnographic accounts on Andamanese hunter-gatherers
8 Rethinking indigenous hunting in Northeastern India: Some lessons for academics and practitioners
9 Sustainable grazing practices: Conserving biodiversity in an Asian tropical grassland
PART IV Intangible benefits
10 Counting to conserve: The role of communities and civil society in monitoring marine turtles
11 Bringing reptiles into the conservation sphere: A personal account
12 Linking ecotourism and biodiversity conservation: Lessons from India
13 Sacred groves of Central India: Beyond the botany and the ecology
PART V Conclusion
14 Sustainable use and biodiversity conservation: Experiences, challenges, and ways forward
Glossary
Index