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feminism in recent times (Shiva 1988; Agarwal 1991, 1997;
Venkateswaran 1995).
Discussion among the activists and the social scientists have also
centred around the environmental and social costs of development
planning in India, the latter invariably being borne by the poor. Several
studies, including those of Rao (1995) and Sharma (1996) have
underlined it. Although it is recognised that environmental degradation
threatens all, irrespective of people's wealth, privilege, status or class,
the fact nonetheless remains, especially in the developing countries like
India, that the weak, the poor and the underprivileged are the worst
victims of it. Displacement, marginalisation and deterioration of the
quality of life of large sections of the population, the tribals, nomadic
communities, craftsmen, the urban and the rural poor and women, as a
result of the economic policies of the government have concerned both
social scientists and activists alike. The aim is to work out an alternative
framework of development which would combine sustainability with
equity and social justice. It can hardly be overstated that everywhere in
the developing countries, as in India, protests and struggles by rural and
urban communities for control, access and management of natural
resources upon which their lives and livelihood depend, are taking place
and gaining worldwide recognition. Friedman and Rangan call it
'environmental action' (1993:4).
Contemporary ecological movements, especially the Chipko
movement and the Narmada Bachao Andolan, as well as conflicts over
natural resources like water, forest and fisheries have recently found a
place in social science research in India (Shiva 1991; Gadgil and Guha
1996; Baviskar 1995; Kurien 1993; Berreman 1989; Jain 1984; Omvedt
1987). Conflicts/struggles over forest, water, fish, land, pasture and
village commons being widespread all over the country, many studies on
these aspects are needed; it is also a fact that there is a tradition of study
of social movements in sociology.
Each of these areas needs to be further explored and researched
before a comprehensive understanding of a situation as complex and
varied as ours can emerge. Social scientists must turn their attention to
these issues which have so far been regarded as outside the purview of
serious social science research, and left to environmentalists, journalists
and activists.
The somewhat non-systematic and fragmentary character of the
existing literature/discussion on issues concerning environment and
society is reflected in the present article. A sociological/social science
perspective in the analysis of environmental issues is still emerging.
While a very broad area of study has opened up in the last two decades
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Sociological Bulletin
or so, it still remains ton the margins of the disciplines unabsorbed and
therefore not properly integrated. Responding to the demands of social
reality, sociologists are just beginning to explore the many dimensions of
the environmental problems of our times. But the infinite possibilities for
research and reflection exist amidst a relative poverty of theoretical and
conceptual clarity.
The task is rendered difficult, to my mind, by the fact that analysis of
environmental issues and problems must necessarily incorporate the
historical and the global context just as it must be truly interdisciplinary
for an insightful understanding to emerge. One can only hope that
sociologists in India will pay serious attention to issues related to
environment and society not because they are currently in vogue, but
because they represent a major challenge of our times.
Conclusion
On a more general level, it is amply clear that the most crucial
contradiction of our times is the one between industrial/capitalist mode
of production and consumption on the one hand, and ecology on the
other. There are external constraints to growth which are rapidly being
violated, causing loss of physical and mental well-being. Not just one
class but all sections of society suffer or may suffer from the ecological
and socio-ecological consequences of this mode. An awareness of the
threat to survival has given rise to a new kind of politics and political
action which questions and challenges the agenda of development, and
puts forward ideas of alternative development, life style, values, in other
words, a more 'sustainable human development'
3
. Given the fundamental
nature of these issues, it is only right that they should form the basis for
sociological enquiry.
The ecological/environmental perspective opens up the hitherto
unexplored dimensions of some of the important areas of sociological
concern.
As a powerful critique of the modernisation/development
agenda, this perspective brings out the unsustainability of the
project. The industrial capitalist mode of production and
consumption destroys the very resource base necessary for its
existence, but even more, threatens human life itself. With the
growth of ecological politics and movements, a new area of
sociological enquiry has opened up which transcends the
conventional dichotomy of the right and left politics, cuts across
' Environment' in Sociological Theory
263
class divisions and even national boundaries and creates spaces
for activism within the civil society using the popular initiative.
In a fundamental sense, it calls for a redefinition of the relation
between human beings and their natural environment, and a
reconsideration of the effect of human action upon nature. More
than ever before, the view that nature must be mastered,
controlled and used for the satisfaction of ever-increasing human
needs, that is, the ideology of the industrial mode, is being
seriously challenged.
More recently, a course on environment and society should form a
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