Site icon Youth Ki Awaaz

This Podcast Is Capturing India’s Development Story, As It Happens

In the Field is a show that attempts to capture India’s development story, as it happens, through a feature-style podcast that combines interviews, commentary, and debate. By showcasing the ideas that drive the development agenda, and the people working at the forefront of these issues, the show will tell a larger story, one that links backs to the daily actions of all people. We want to muddle the typical problem-solution, hero-villain or donor-recipient narrative common to development work, and change the way listeners understand their role and position in relation to each of the issues we present.

We also hope to start a conversation about culture: the culture of development work as we practice it and to examine how it influences social progress in India today. Episodes will be released every two weeks, and in each episode, we will examine an issue or idea India is trying hard to overcome, and we will talk to people working on its solutions.

The latest episode of In the Field is out now and looks at the issue of environmental justice in India. LISTEN TO IT HERE.

The Indian environmental movement has had a long and fascinating history. While young India’s charismatic leaders were instrumental in instituting laws to protect nature and wildlife, powerful social movements fought to bring to light the important connection between development, the environment, and vulnerable people. Environmental justice in the Indian context has arisen from these movements, and we now have laws and regulation that are intended to protect people and compensate them for what they stand to lose.

Today we see environmental awareness growing in urban India. The middle classes have an agency like never before – suddenly conscious of fragile urban landscapes, they are demanding and coming together for better solid waste management, to clean up roads anonymously and beautifying urban landscapes, to launch huge beach cleaning initiatives, and even taking to the streets to reject large flyovers. Society is starting to move in, fight for and take matters into its own hands.

Cows grazing by Jakkur Lake

On the flip side, the poor, vulnerable, and marginalised are also being impacted directly by the poor state of the environment. Justice, in the context of environmental issues, is meant to be a leveller. And the extent to which Indian law has expanded these past 70 years, to address environmental justice is admirable. The purview of the law is vast and empowering when harnessed and leveraged correctly.

In this episode of In the Field, we examine how urban environmentalism can dominate ideas of what kind of planet we want for ourselves, what kind of nature we want to protect, conserve, and how we are going about doing it. While we believe we’re fighting a fight for the greater common good, how are we ignoring or forgetting the fight for environmental justice that is about the specific issues faced by the vulnerable? And how do we make a connection between the fight for the greater common good and the fight for justice?

Kartik Shanker, Director of ATREE, speaks about how the Indian conservation movement has evolved from being more nepotistic to becoming more democratic. Kanchi Kohli and Manju Menon explain what lead to the development of environmental regulation in India, and their colleague Maruti Gowda, a clam fisherman from Karnataka tells us how he helps his, and other vulnerable communities claim what is rightfully theirs from their local governments – thanks to the CPR-Namati Environmental Justice Programme.

We hear from Priya Ramasubban about her journey and experience as one of the pivotal actors in the Kaikondrahalli Lake rejuvenation effort in Bangalore; and from Leo Saldanha, Head of the Environment Support Group on how caste has been perpetuated in urban India’s municipal waste management system. Asher Ghertner, Director of the South Asia Studies programme at Rutgers University discusses the legal discourse around the commons – air being the ultimate commons.

Many thanks to Gramvaani for sharing the first audio clip you heard. Please do take some time and check them out, they do excellent work, and tell vital stories for our times.

Exit mobile version