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Between the city and the village: the differential impact of the predatory and absentee state on indigenous land rights and deforestation in Bangladesh and India

Scanlan, Oliver James (2018) Between the city and the village: the differential impact of the predatory and absentee state on indigenous land rights and deforestation in Bangladesh and India. PhD thesis, Dublin City University.

Abstract
Smallholders in the Global South are often excluded from their land rights by exclusionary policies of conservation, which are intensifying in the face of a changing climate. Such conflicts are often the most problematic where they overlap with the extant political-marginalisation of the smallholder, articulated in ethnic terms. The world’s Indigenous Peoples, being among the most vulnerable to dispossession while also tending to inhabit forested spaces, are of central importance to these debates. South Asia comprises a “natural laboratory” of different institutional arrangements that mediate the relationship between the State and the land and forestry rights of Indigenous Peoples. This study uses ethnographic methods, remote sensing analysis of forest cover change and archival research to test whether this institutional variation leads to differences in dispossession and deforestation, and offer conclusions as to why this is the case. The Garo community inhabits both Meghalaya state in India and the Madhupur region of Bangladesh, with strong and weak legal protections over lands and forests respectively. The study finds that dispossession and deforestation outcomes are worse in Bangladesh than in India. This difference results institutionally from a lack of recognition of the legitimacy of Garo land rights in Madhupur which in turn stems from the local, ethnically-bounded political-economy, the “Predatory State”. This comprises an assemblage of local political elites and State bureaucrats for whom both the Garo smallholding and the original forest represent untapped resources that dispossession releases into the dominant political-economy. In contrast, Garo land rights are afforded full legal recognition in Meghalaya, resulting in low levels of dispossession and a conservation regime that is robust because ownership of protected areas remains vested in the community. This situation is deteriorating as land values increase, due to an “Absentee State” that does not provide robust and accessible dispute resolution processes, resulting institutionally in community rights being only partially embedded in the wider administrative structure. The main underlying cause is that institutional dysfunction was deliberately designed into the system to allow the State to “recentralise while decentralising”.
Metadata
Item Type:Thesis (PhD)
Date of Award:November 2018
Refereed:No
Supervisor(s):Gaynor, Niamh
Subjects:Social Sciences > Sociology
Social Sciences > Ethnicity
Social Sciences > Political science
DCU Faculties and Centres:DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Science > School of Law and Government
Use License:This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License
ID Code:22397
Deposited On:22 Nov 2018 13:42 by Niamh Gaynor . Last Modified 11 Jun 2022 03:30
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