The Routledge International Handbook of Himalayan Environments, Development and Wellbeing
Mary Cameron editor Ben Campbell editor Tanka Subba editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:14th May '25
£215.00
This title is due to be published on 14th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
Shifting dynamics of peoples, livelihoods, and territories, influenced by global warming, require new ways of thinking and new kinds of politics beyond the sovereignties of idealized traditional European nation-states. The Routledge International Handbook of Himalayan Environments, Development and Wellbeing features over 70 scholars from the social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences who explore the interrelationships between environmental change, development, and wellbeing across the entire Himalayan region—from the Indian Himalayas in the east to Bhutan, Nepal, Tibet (TAR), India, and Gilgit-Baltistan in the west.
Within over 50 chapters, the handbook presents engaging field-based research on the region's socio-cultural diversity, climate adaptation, and socio-economic transformation. It examines creative ways Himalayan communities adapt, seek wellbeing, and respond to environmental and development challenges. Lessons about learning from Indigenous and local peoples, about governance of forests and water, and grassroots conservation practices from the Himalayan region can help inform global networks of researchers and practitioners.
The handbook will interest scholars, students, stakeholders, and the public about the evolving relationships between Himalayan peoples, territories, and global warming, offering insights into people’s creative ways for understanding, adapting, and seeking wellbeing in environmental relations and development possibilities.
"The volume is a precious guide for navigating in the complexities of human-environment relationships within the Himalayan range, during the Anthropocene era. It brings together contributions from a remarkable group of scholars to explore social, political, cultural and historical ecologies in light of the recent changes that define this era, particularly with regard to migration, water and forest resources and wellbeing.”
Marie Lecomte-Tilouine, CNRS Senior researcher, LAS, Collège de France, Paris
"An excellent regional handbook by a global community of scholars, sharing deep knowledge and deep personal engagement with the Himalayas. The stories told inhabit the spaces between environmental catastrophe narratives and Shangri-la. The approach and frames of reference are innovative, compelling and highly recommended."
Edward Simpson, Executive Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Lancaster University, UK
"This handbook is poised to provide new challenges to thinking about interactions between environment, development and wellbeing in an amazingly diverse region. The nearly sixty chapters cover a rich range of topics, focusing on complex transitions rather than simplified unilineal change. They include discussion of increasing forest cover in Nepal and the complex changes involved. They also include rethinking of social and environmental transitions such as increasing urbanisation and transition to reduced family size. The book is deeply interdisciplinary, covers much of the geographic and cultural diversity of the region and defaults in cultural relativism (as one of the editors writes). Anyone with a passion for the Himalayas will find this a challenging and exciting book."
Robert Fisher, Tropical Forests and People Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia; School of Geosciences, University of Sydney
"This collection displays the richness and diversity of scholarship on the Himalayas. It could not be more timely, as climate crisis, economic speculation, and new political alignments force Himalayan peoples to reckon with unprecedented change. Critical scholars from across the social sciences and humanities will surely find it essential reading."
Sarah Besky, Professor of the Anthropology of Work, ILR School, and Director, South Asia Program, Einaudi Center for International Studies, Cornell University
"This Handbook is a collection of cutting-edge studies exploring how the penetration of the 21st century economy and technology have profoundly disrupted human-environmental relations, the theory and practice of development, and the well-being of the region’s people. A highlight of the book is the ways the authors present the ambiguity or these changes and the range of possible futures. In addition, that half the authors/co-authors of the collection are from the Himalayan region enriches the analyses and expands the interpretations of the topics of the book."
John Metz, Associate Professor, North Kentucky University, USA
"The editors are to be congratulated on bringing together a stellar array of contributions. Every specialist of the region will want to have this collection of vital case studies on their shelves. More importantly, every NGO and government office responsible for, or working in, the region should have it to hand as an indispensable reminder of the sheer diversity of Himalayan people’s experiences of the environment, the state, culture, and wellbeing in a time of rapid climatic change."
David N. Gellner FBA, editor of 'Borderland Lives in Northern South Asia'
"This is an exceptionally valuable collection of essays that sheds critical light on the complex and important reality of the Himalaya region. The interdisciplinary contributions to this handbook effectively challenge reductionist, sensationalist, and orientalist perspectives on the mountains. By focusing on the experiences of people whose lives are entangled in the environment, and who are implicated in development projects from the ground up, this collection provides deep insights on how to look at, but also beyond, crises and catastrophes. To look beyond is to better understand the nature of wellbeing in a place that well reflects the intimate challenges of living in the Anthropocene."
Joseph Alter, Professor of Anthropology and Director, Asian Studies Center, University of Pittsburgh. 'Yoga in Modern India: The Body Between Science and Philosophy'
"There is a demographic churning underway across the Himalaya. Variegated lifestyles are being lost even as glaciers retreat, permafrost lets go, groundwater is depleted, hill terraces go fallow, and cultures see a breathless, unprecedented transformation. Breakneck ecological change feeds human bewilderment and distress. Only diverse disciplines and voices can do justice to all that is happening across the 2500 km of the Himalayan arc, which is why this volume is valuable. It helps the world understand the challenges facing societies and ecologies of our mountains."
Kanak M. Dixit, journalist, activist, founding editor 'Himal Southasian'
"An important resource for thinking about constellations of struggle and hope across the entire Himalayan region, the Handbook invites readers to envision environmental and social transformations as they are known, seen, and felt from a multitude of locations. This collection usefully resists reducing the historical complexity of places and problems into singular stories of crisis and its causes."
Stacy Leigh Pigg, anthropology professor, Simon Fraser University
ISBN: 9781032586403
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
690 pages