Dear GEP Colleagues,

Many of you are at the ISA and the discussions we have had at various
panels reminded me that I needed to send this announcement now. When you
are at the Oxford University Press booth at the ISA, please check out my
book released earlier this month. Let me also mention that it is the first
in a new OUP series "*Studies in Comparative Energy and* *Environmental
Politics*"

Best Regards,
Prakash

*Democracy in the Woods: Environmental Conservation and Social Justice in
India, Tanzania, and Mexico*. *Oxford University Press (2017)*
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/democracy-in-the-woods-9780190637385

How do societies negotiate the apparently competing agendas of
environmental protection and social justice? Why do some countries perform
much better than others on this front?

*Democracy in the Wood*s addresses these question by examining land rights
conflicts-and the fate of forest-dependent peasants-in the context of the
different forest property regimes in India, Tanzania, and Mexico. These
three countries are prominent in the scholarship and policy debates about
national forest policies and land conflicts associated with international
support for nature conservation. This unique comparative study of national
forestland regimes challenges the received wisdom that redistributive
policies necessarily undermine the goals of environmental protection. It
shows instead that the form that national environmental protection efforts
take - either inclusive (as in Mexico) or exclusive (as in Tanzania and,
for the most part, in India) - depends on whether dominant political
parties are compelled to create structures of political intermediation that
channel peasant demands for forest and land rights into the policy process.
This book offers three different tests of this theory of political origins
of forestland regimes. First, it explains why it took the Indian political
elites nearly sixty years to introduce meaningful reforms of the
colonial-era forestland regimes. Second, it successfully explains the
rather counterintuitive local outcomes of the programs for formalization of
land rights in India, Tanzania, and Mexico. Third, it provides a coherent
explanation of why each of these three countries proposes a significantly
different distribution of the benefits of forest-based climate change
mitigation programs being developed under the auspices of the United
Nations.

In its political analysis of the control over and the use of nature, this
book opens up new avenues for reflecting on how legacies of the past and
international interventions interject into domestic political processes to
produce specific configurations of environmental protection and social
justice. Democracy in the Woods offers a theoretically rigorous argument
about why and in what specific ways politics determine the prospects of a
socially just and environmentally secure world.

-----------------------------------------------
Prakash Kashwan (प्रकाश कसवाँ), Ph.D.
http://prakash-kashwan.uconn.edu/


<https://www.amazon.in/Democracy-Woods-Environmental-Conservation-Comparative-ebook/dp/B01NANYBD5>

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