Skip to content
General Program
Panel information
In-Person Participant info
Online Participant info
IN-CONFERENCE EXCURSION REGISTRATION
Support IASC
  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging
  • About the Conference
    • Welcome & Introduction
    • Conference Theme & Sub-themes
    • Accepted Panels
    • Information for Online Participants
    • Pre-conference workshops
    • Organizers
    • Sponsors
    • Hosting institutions
    • Elinor Ostrom Award
    • Contact us
  • Information for Online Participants
  • Visas
    • Visa Information
    • IASC membership
  • Schedules & guidelines
    • General Program
    • Accepted Panels grouped in 12 sub-themes
    • Author Index
    • Important Dates
    • Conference Venue
  • Excursions
    • In-Conference Excursions — Thursday June 19th, 2025
    • Post-Conference Excursions — June 21 – 22, 2025
  • Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging
    • Conference Registration Fees
    • Travel
    • Food at the Conference
    • Participant Lodging

Sen, Amrita

Author

Session 9. 8. B.
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Integrative Learning Center ILCN 155
Neoliberal Entwined: Narratives of Enclosed Ecological Commons From the Protected Areas of Duars, North Bengal
in-person
Priyadarsini Sinha, Jenia Mukherjee, and Amrita Sen
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, India

In this presentation, we would highlight ways in which a ‘situated political ecology’ approach can capture livelihoods and co-creation of forest enclosed ecological commons in the three Protected Areas of Buxa Tiger Reserve, Jaldapara National Park and Gorumara National Park, in the state of West Bengal, India. Using a qualitative and ethnographic approach, we show that established systems of resource control have translated Duars, the Eastern Sub-Himalayan savannah grassland, into a politico-ecological entity of colonial extractive capitalism. Neoliberal conservation as espoused by the state forest governance have incorporated global priorities into the local forest economies, for subsuming the protected forests into a world capitalist production system. Commercialization of Duars not only led to a space for extraction of resources, but consequently have dispossessed communities of their erstwhile rights. Neoliberal conservation mechanisms are transforming forest-dependent communities towards market-based livelihoods.

This study is an ethnographic account of the forest villages of the Protected Areas of Duars i.e. Buxa Tiger Reserve, Jaldapara National Park and Gorumara National Park, where the forest-dependent communities’ dependency on commons is critical for their livelihood, survival and subsistence. These communities have a strong sense of belonging with their commons, which stands as a criticality of commons due to contested access to resources. Customarily the symbiotic relation of the forest-dependent communities to the forest’s systems have been rooted in their socio-natural practices while being dependent on their forest common resources. Forest-dependent communities predominantly depend upon common lands for open cattle grazing, as they either have small agricultural land, or are landless. Livestock raising, subsistence cultivation are critical economic form of livelihood as access to forest resources have been restricted. This ethnographic study using situated political ecology approach will contribute towards how situated living practices of struggle and resilience around livelihood opportunities are being produced through forest conservation institutions. We will further argue how co-creation of livelihood resilience for the communities along with provisions for the preservation of local ecological knowledge in these volatile geographies are necessary.

  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)
  • General Program
  • Panel Schedule Oral Presentations
  • Poster Presentations
  • IASC 2025 Social System Map
  • IASC 2025 Slack Workspace
  • Teamup Calendar (also see below in your local time)

About the Conference

Welcome & Introduction

Conference theme & sub-themes

Online Components

Pre-conference workshops

Organizers

Sponsors

Hosting Institutions

Elinor Ostrom Award

Contact Us

Visas, registration & payments

Visa Information

IASC Membership

Registration

Schedules & Guidlines

Important Dates

Call for Contributions

Panels in Progress

Conference Venue

Conference Excursions

In-Conference Excursions

Post-Conference Excursions

Fees, Travel, Food & Lodging

Conference Registration Fees

Travel

Food at the Conference

Participant Lodging

Facebook-f X-twitter Linkedin

© 2025 | Privacy & Cookies Policy

Made with 🤟🏻 by Pfister Lab