Living with or beside the river : Control of Brahmaputra’s hydrological dynamics v/s peasant mobility

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_185FED80028F
Type
Autre: use this type when nothing else fits.
Collection
Publications
Title
Living with or beside the river : Control of Brahmaputra’s hydrological dynamics v/s peasant mobility
Author(s)
Émilie Crémin, Stéphane Grivel
Issued date
22/06/2015
Language
english
Abstract
In North-East India, every year during the monsoon season, the level of the Brahmaputra rises and floods cover the plain with silt and sandy sediments. The Brahmaputra undergoes extreme changes with regards its channel configurations, involving the erosion of cultivated and village lands. To prevent these phenomena, the territorial authorities have built embankments along the riverbanks in order to improve land use and to protect human settlements. Nevertheless, the Mising tribe has been used to coping with floods for a long time. They practise different types of paddy cultivation and grow varieties that can adjust to the various ecosystems. They also used to move their settlements according to how the river channels shift. However, nowadays, communities can barely transfer their dwelling-places when their villages are washed away because land records restrict their movements. Protected by embankments, villagers are no longer used to having to face floods. Consequently, they are not prepared when the river suddenly breaches embankments. Families find themselves landless and have to adjust their livelihoods. This paper focus on how the government is managing river dynamics, such as flood and erosion and how the riverside inhabitants adjust their livelihoods to newly created conditions. We question whether embankments effectively protect people or contribute to increase risks.
Create date
29/09/2023 9:48
Last modification date
14/10/2023 13:49
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