ABSTRACT

This volume studies the intersection of capital and ecology primarily in one of the most sensitive geographies of the world, the Eastern Himalayan region. It looks at how the region has become a melting ground of neoliberal developmentalism and ecological subjectivities with the penetrating forces of global and state capitalism, economic projects, and complex power relations. The essays in the volume argue that specific focus on energy infrastructure and energy production has pushed technology and capital towards asset building which has had an adverse effect on the environment, labour relations, indigenous knowledge systems, and traditional livelihood practices in the area. They look at assets like mega dams, electricity transmission networks, natural gas grids, infrastructural and developmental projects, and other alternative ventures which require interventions in the natural world and its resource deposits.

 

Interdisciplinary in approach, the volume adopts a variety of lenses — developmentalism, state strategy, indigenous voices, geopolitics, and environmentalism — to provide a unique and alternative narrative on the various dimensions of the ecological risks and livelihood threats. It will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of politics, development studies, indigenous studies, and Asian studies.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part Section I|78 pages

Growth Epistemology and Environmental Conjunctures

chapter Chapter 1|15 pages

Money, Capital, Power and Nature

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

Economic Growth and Ecological Conundrum

chapter Chapter 3|21 pages

Conflict over Climate

Trajectory of Environmental Historiography in Northeast India

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

Hardwoods and the British Empire in Assam

Sal and Teak in the Age of Colonialism, 1850s–1940s

part Section II|62 pages

Developmentalism, Extractive Economy and Ecomasculinity

chapter Chapter 5|23 pages

Ecological Ruptures in the Eastern Himalayas

The Political Economy of Hydropower Development in Arunachal Pradesh

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

‘Why the Caged Bird Sings’

Resource Capture and Resistance in the China–Myanmar Borderlands

chapter Chapter 7|24 pages

Ecomasculinity in the Neoliberal Era

Case of the Eastern Himalayas and Its Degrading Ecology

part Section III|112 pages

Capital, Subjectivities and Human/Non-human Responses

chapter Chapter 9|22 pages

Where Is the ‘Geo’-political?

More-Than-Human Politics, Polities, and Poetics in the Bhutan Highlands

chapter Chapter 13|15 pages

Work, Women and Landscape in the Himalayas

part Section IV|64 pages

Rights, Regulations and Alternatives

chapter Chapter 14|19 pages

Nature's Rights

Alternatives to the Conventional Frame