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This Fissured Land
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This Fissured Land : ウィキペディア英語版
This Fissured Land

''This Fissured Land''〔Oxford University Press, http://global.oup.com/academic/product/this-fissured-land-second-edition-9780198077442?cc=in&lang=en&〕〔Oxford Scholarship http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198077442.001.0001/acprof-9780198077442〕 is a book by Madhav Gadgil and Ramachandra Guha on the ecological history of India. It examines 'prudent' (sustainable) and 'profligate' (unsustainable) use of natural resources, and their effects. It describes the ecological history of India, from the first humans, through the ages of hunter-gatherers, farmers, empires and the British Raj.
==Outline==

The book is split into three parts, as follows:〔http://books.google.co.in/books/about/This_Fissured_Land.html?id=Jmr9n7aoRR4C〕
Part 1 of the book introduces the concept of "Modes of resource use". According to Sonja Brodt of the University of Hawaii, the authors based this classification on the "Marxist 'mode of production' framework, which they intend to complement ...(it lacks )... reflection on ecological parameters, and ...()... is not adequately materialistic ... (book is therefore ) written from a strongly materialistic perspective. Everything from economy to ideology is seen to derive from resource use modes."〔(''Case Studies in History and Society Vol-I (1994)'', Sonja Brodt, Journal of Political Ecology ), paragraph 3〕 Accordingly, there are four modes of resource use - gathering / shifting cultivation, nomadic pastoralism, settled cultivation and industrial society, even though more than one mode of resource use may exist in one society at a time.〔(''Case Studies in History and Society Vol-I (1994)'', Sonja Brodt, Journal of Political Ecology ), paragraph 2〕
This section also explains the difference between prudent or sustainable use of resources and unsustainable or profligate resource exploitation.〔p 3, ln 12, ''This Fissured Land''〕 Sustainable use involves restrictions on the use of (1) ecologically important species, (2) ecologically sensitive areas, (3) certain life stages (e.g. juveniles) etc. Such strategies may be based on either trial and error - as in early humans and modern tribal societies - or observation and study - as in most modern societies. In either case, sustainable use has little negative impact on the environment, and societies can survive for long periods of time without significant changes. Unsustainable use, whether scientific or unscientific, leads to rapid exhaustion of resources and damage to both the society and its environment.
Part 2 discusses ecological events in the history of India. It argues that the replacement of early hunter-gatherer societies with extensive agricultural ones lead to an environmental crisis, and that the growing environmental awareness is visible in Buddhist and Jain teachings and literature.〔〔https://wordlimitreached.wordpress.com/2010/08/05/this-fissured-land-review/〕
Part 3 of the book examines ecologically important events during, and just after, British rule.〔(''Case Studies in History and Society Vol-I (1994)'', Sonja Brodt, Journal of Political Ecology ), paragraph 5〕〔p 4, ln 31, ''This Fissured Land''〕 Colonial forestry practices, such as those favoured by Baden-Powell, led to the destruction of village - level conservation systems. At the same time, little was done to introduce a centralized conservation strategy (as Germany had). The book argues that this is a major reason for India's ecological problems. Finally, a study of industrial and state forestry is made, concluding that they are far inferior to village or social forestry when it comes to conservation.
Sonja Brodt feels that "...(authors avoid )... the usual, overused stories of conflict ... They also avoid some of the black-and-white cliches so common in writings about colonial resource exploitation in the third world. For example, although British forestry policies are pinpointed as one major cause of forest depletion and conflicts, the authors ...(written evidence )... that some of the administrators openly opposed the prevailing policies. They also decline to exonerate all Indian rulers ... The result is an analysis that for the most part is refreshingly frank and balanced in its assessments."〔
The concluding chapter says that it is too early to say whether a new, more sustainable, mode of resource use will develop as a result of the present environmental crisis. This is because "given the complexity of ecological communities, precise prescriptions for the prudent use of living resources are difficult".〔p 23, ''This Fissured Land''〕 Sonja Brodt agrees that "it is ultimately contingent upon the reader to delve deeply into the historical analysis for any lessons it might hold".〔(''Case Studies in History and Society Vol-I (1994)'', Sonja Brodt, Journal of Political Ecology ), paragraph 6〕

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