A Forest History of India
- Richard P. Tucker - School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, USA
The book highlights the two main strains of conflict that characterize the evolution of professional forestry in India. First, the tension between the subsistence needs of the local population and the commercial needs of the colonial state, and second, the clash between the forest department, which sought to preserve and manage forests, and the revenue department, which was driven by the need to expand agriculture and industry.
Written mostly in the 1980s and 1990s, these articles were among the first environmental history studies in India and contribute significantly to the understanding of the colonial legacy for post-Independence management of India's natural resources.
A wide-ranging and valuable collection of essays from a pioneering historian of tropical forestry.
[The book] deepens our understanding of India’s environment history within the broader analytical and global contest…The book is a useful reference for scholars of environment history in India as a compilation of a set of the author’s main publications from the region.