India's Pastoralist Communities: Solutions for Survival

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Duncan, J. (2016). India’s Pastoralist Communities: Solutions for Survival. Solutions 7(4): 13–17. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/indias-pastoralist-communities-solutions-for-survival/

Idea Lab Interview

India’s Pastoralist Communities: Solutions for Survival Monika Agarwal Interviewed by Jessica Duncan

F

or more than 15 years, Monika Agarwal has been working with the pastoralists of India, including EDA Rural Systems Consultancy, MARAG (an Indian NGO), the World Alliance for Mobile Indigenous Peoples (WAMIP), and as the International Land Coalition’s National Engagement Strategy coordinator for India. Her forthcoming publication, “There is dignity only with livestock: Land grabbing and the changing social practices of pastoralist women in Gujarat, India,” is to be published soon in the book Cosmopolitan Rural Gender Relation: International Perspectives on Gender and Rural Development (CABI 2017). She has just launched new a project that will see her living with different pastoralist communities across India to learn about the challenges they face, and to identify possibilities for securing their futures. She has an MBA in rural management from the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA), India.

The situation for pastoralists around the world is complicated and increasingly challenging. Although there is evidence that pastoralism is a very suitable form of production and land use, especially in dryland areas, as a livelihood and culture, it has come under threat. These threats include legal, economic, social, and political disincentives, but also barriers to being able to graze and migrate with livestock. Can you explain the situation for pastoralists in India at the moment? Recently, I read that Indian pastoralism is the worst documented of all pastoral populations. This has not improved, and we still do not know

Himalayan Drifters

Monika Agarwal with Dilip, a Gaddi Pastoralist, Kangra District, Himachal Pradesh.

the exact population of pastoralists in India. Different experts have estimated that pastoralists make up eight to ten percent of India’s 1.2 billion population, and yet, most people know very little, if anything, about pastoralism. Many a time, when I have told my friends in India that I work with pastoralists, they are surprised to know that there are pastoralists outside Africa, and that a large population of pastoralists exists in India. In this scenario, it is quite obvious that pastoralists are an invisible constituency, and that their issues and interests are not reflected in development policies or more broadly in the governance of this country. The situation of pastoralists worldwide is the same and deteriorating rapidly because of increasing commercial pressures on land, impacts of globalization, and climate change. In India, we have seen they have no option but

to drastically reduce herd sizes, and many are eventually pushed out of pastoralism. Pastoralists who have coexisted with nature and livestock for centuries now always complain that “today we cannot decide how many livestock we can keep.” You point out that there is a clear need for a broader and better understanding of the situation of pastoralists in India. Can you tell us what some of the main threats are to pastoralism? I would like to discuss two main threats that I see: land grabbing, especially of the commons, and youth engagement. In recent times, the corporate interest in land has become perhaps our biggest threat. Let us accept that land grabbing is a global phenomenon and that there is little we can do to stop it. The rush for land to meet capitalist interests is targeting

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  July-August 2016  |  Solutions  |  13


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