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Community-based Natural Resource Management in the Sundarbans
There has been widespread assertion of the fact that traditional state laws on protected area conservation can pose a threat to the customary collective rights of local communities inhabiting these areas, inducing livelihood vulnerabilities. Within contemporary academic discourse, thus, there remains a major question concerning the issue of institutionalising the non-marketable customary collective rights of local communities to address the asymmetrical power relationships in natural resource distribution conflicts. Against this backdrop, a study conducted in the Sundarban forest region of West Bengal explores the community-based natural resource management paradigm and how customary rights of the local communities have fared under the joint forest management programme. It examines the applicability, as well as the successes and limitations of the programme as an alternative to state-led top-down models of conservation, and the impact of political and economic control over people and resources.
Revised versions of this paper were presented at the International Conference of the Commission of Legal Pluralism organised by the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay in December 2015 and at the International Conference of the European Network of Political Ecology organised by the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden in March 2016.