Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T21:00:12.236Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2018

Michael H. Fisher
Affiliation:
Oberlin College, Ohio
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
An Environmental History of India
From Earliest Times to the Twenty-First Century
, pp. 264 - 282
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abraham, Shinu Anna, Gullapalli, Praveena, and Raczek, Teresa (2013). Connections and Complexity: New Approaches to the Archaeology of South Asia (Left Coast Press).Google Scholar
Abu al-Fazl, (1873–94). Ain-i Akbari, trans. H. Blochmann, H. S. Jarrett, 3 vols. (Asiatic Society of Bengal).Google Scholar
Aftab, E. and Hickey, G. M. (2010). “Forest Administration Challenges in Pakistan: The Case of the Patriata Reserved Forest and the ‘New Murree’ Development,” International Forestry Review, 12/1:97105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agarwal, Bina (2010). Gender and Green Governance: The Political Economy of Women’s Presence Within and Beyond Community Forestry (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Agnihotri, Indu (1996). “Ecology, Land Use and Colonisation: The Canal Colonies of Punjab,” Indian Economic and Social History Review, 33/1:3758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agrawal, Arun (2005). Environmentality: Technologies of Government and the Making of Subjects (Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Agrawal, Arun, and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds. (2000). Agrarian Environments: Resources, Representations, and Rule in India (Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Ahmad, Zarin (2018). Delhi’s Meatscapes (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Ahmed, Ijaz, and Kazi, Muneeza (2005). Environmental Law in Pakistan: Governing Natural Resources and the Processes and Institutions that Affect Them, 5 Parts (IUCN).Google Scholar
Ahsan, Irum, and Khawaja, Saima Amin (2013). Development of Environmental Laws and Jurisprudence in Pakistan (Asian Development Bank).Google Scholar
ʿAlamgir, (1908). Rukaat-i-ʿAlamgiri, trans. Jamshid H. Bilimoria (Luzac).Google Scholar
Ali, Daud, and Flatt, Emma J, eds. (2012). Garden and Landscape Practices in Pre-Colonial India: Histories from the Deccan (Routledge).Google Scholar
Ali, Imran (2003). The Punjab Under Imperialism, 1885–1947 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Ali, Jason, and Aitchison, Jonathan (2008). “Gondwana to Asia: Plate Tectonics, Paleogeography and the Biological Connectivity of the Indian Sub-Continent from the Middle Jurassic through Latest Eocene (166–35 Ma),” Earth-Science Reviews 88:145–66.Google Scholar
Ali, Tanvir (2007). “Impact of Participatory Forest Management on Financial Assets of Rural Communities in Northwest PakistanEcological Economics 6/3: 588–93.Google Scholar
Allchin, Bridget, and Petraglia, Michael, eds. (2007). The Evolution and History of Human Populations in South Asia (Springer).Google Scholar
Alley, Kelly (2002). On the Banks of the Ganga: When Wastewater Meets a Sacred River (University of Michigan Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amponin, Janet, and Evans, James (2016). Assessing the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions of ADB Developing Members (Asian Development Bank).Google Scholar
Appell, Virginia, and Saleem Baluch, M. (2003). “Mitigating the Effects of Drought through Traditional and Modern Water Supply Systems in Balochistan,” in Jehangir, Waqar A and Hussain, Intizar, eds., Poverty Reduction through Improved Agricultural Water Management (International Water Management Institute, Islamabad), pp. 241–59.Google Scholar
Arnold, David (1988). Famine: Social Crisis and Historical Change (Basil Blackwell).Google Scholar
Arnold, David (1996). The Problem of Nature: Environment, Culture and European Expansion (Blackwell).Google Scholar
Arnold, David (2000). Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Arnold, David (2008). “Plant Capitalism and Company Science,” Modern Asian Studies 42/5:899928.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnold, David (2013). “Pollution, Toxicity and Public Health in Metropolitan India, 1850–1939,” Journal of Historical Geography 42:124–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnold, David (2016). Toxic Histories: Poison and Pollution in Modern India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Arnold, David, and Guha, Ramachandra, eds. (1995). Nature, Culture and Imperialism: Essays on the Environmental History of South Asia (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Asian Development Bank (2004). Country Environmental Analysis: Bangladesh (Asian Development Bank).Google Scholar
Asher, Catherine (1992). Architecture of Mughal India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Asthana, Vandana (2009). Water Policy Processes in India: Discourses of Power and Resistance (Routledge).Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M. (1985). Apparatus of Empire (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Azizullah, Azizullah, Khan Khattak, Muhammad Nasir, Richter, Peter, and Hader, Donat-Peter (2011). “Water Pollution in Pakistan and Its Impact on Public Health: A Review,” Environment International 37:479–97.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Babur, (2002). Baburnama, trans. W. M. Thackston (Modern Library).Google Scholar
Baghel, Ravi (2014). River Control in India: Spatial, Governmental and Subjective Dimensions (Springer).Google Scholar
Bailey, R. C., and Headland, T. N. (1991). “The Tropical Rain Forest: Is It a Productive Environment for Human Foragers?Human Ecology 19/2:115–22Google Scholar
Baker, Kathleen, and Jewitt, Sarah (2007). “Evaluating 35 Years of Green Revolution Technology in Villages of Bulandshahr District, Western UP, North India,” Journal of Development Studies 43/2:312–39.Google Scholar
Bamshad, Michael, Kivisild, T., Watkins, W. S., et al. (2001). “Genetic Evidence on the Origins of Indian Caste Populations,” Genome Research 11:9941004.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Damayanti, and Bell, Michael Mayerfeld (2007). “Ecogender: Locating Gender in Environmental Social Science,” Science and Natural Resources 20:319.Google Scholar
Baranski, Marci R. (2015). “Wide Adaptation of Green Revolution Wheat: International Roots and the Indian Context of a New Plant Breeding Ideal, 1960–1970,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 50:4150.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barton, Gregory (2002). Empire Forestry and the Origins of Environmentalism (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Barton, G. A., and Bennett, B. M. (2008). “Environmental Conservation and Deforestation in British India 1855–1947: A Reinterpretation,” Itinerario 32: 83104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baviskar, Amita (1995). In the Belly of the River: Tribal Conflicts over Development in the Narmada Valley (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan (1999). Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Beattie, James (2012). “Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire,” History Compass 10/2:129–39.Google Scholar
Beinart, William, and Hughes, Lotte (2007). Environment and Empire (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Bhimsen, (1972). Tarikh-i-Dilkasha, trans. Jadunath Sarkar (Department of Archives, Bombay).Google Scholar
Biswas, Asit K., Rangachari, R., and Tortajada, Cecelia, eds. (2009). Water Resources of the Indian Subcontinent (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Blake, Stephen (1993). Shahjahanabad (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Borlaug, Norman (1970). “Nobel Lecture: The Green Revolution, Peace, and Humanity,” www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1970/borlaug-lecture.html (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Briggs, John (2003). “The Biogeographic and Tectonic History of India,” Journal of Biogeography 30:381–88.Google Scholar
Bryson, Reid, and Schuldenrein, Joseph (2008). “Water Supply and History: Harappa and the Beas Regional Survey,” Antiquity 82:3748.Google Scholar
Cederlof, Gunnel (2014). Founding an Empire on India’s North-eastern Frontiers, 1790–1840: Climate, Commerce, Polity (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Cederlof, Gunnel, and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds. (2006). Ecological Nationalisms: Nature, Livelihoods, and Identities in South Asia (University of Washington Press).Google Scholar
Centre for Science and the Environment (1982-). Citizens Reports 1- (Centre for Science and the Environment). www.cseindia.org (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, Dilip (2014). “India beyond the Indus Civilisation,” in Colin, Renfrew and Paul, Bahn, eds., Cambridge World Prehistory (Cambridge University Press) vol. 1, pp. 433–46.Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, Pratik (2015). “Purifying the River: Pollution and Purity of Water in Colonial Calcutta,” Studies in History 31/2:178205.Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, Ranjan, ed. (2009). Situating Environmental History (Manohar).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh (2009). “The Climate of History: Four Theses,” Critical Inquiry 35:197222.Google Scholar
Chakravorty, Ranes (1993). “Diseases of Antiquity in South Asia,” in Kiple, Kenneth F, ed., Cambridge World History of Human Disease (Cambridge University Press), pp. 408–12.Google Scholar
Chandra, Uday (2015). “Towards Adivasi Studies: New Perspectives on ‘Tribal’ Margins of Modern India,” Studies in History 31/1:122–27.Google Scholar
Chapple, Christopher Key, ed. (2002). Jainism and Ecology: Nonviolence in the Web of Life (Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Chapple, Christopher Key, and Tucker, Mary Evelyn, eds. (2000). Hinduism and Ecology: The Intersection of Earth, Sky, and Water (Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Chatterji, Joya (2007). The Spoils of Partition: Bengal and India 1947–1967 (Cambridge University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chavda, Divyabhanush (1995). The End of the Trail: The Cheetah in India (Banyan).Google Scholar
Chellaney, Brahma (2011). Water: Asia’s New Battleground (Georgetown University Press).Google Scholar
Chester, Lucy (2009). Borders and Conflict in South Asia (Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Chowdhury, Mohammad, ed. (2014). Forest Conservation in Protected Areas of Bangladesh: Policy and Community Development Perspectives (Springer).Google Scholar
Clemett, Alexandra (2002). Review of Environmental Policy and Legislation in Bangladesh (BEEL).Google Scholar
Cohen, Benjamin (2011). “Modernising the Urban Environment: The Musi River Flood of 1908 in Hyderabad, India,” Environment and History 17: 409–32.Google Scholar
Colbeck, Ian, Nasir, Zaheer Ahmad, and Ali, Zulfiqar (2010a). “State of Ambient Air Quality in Pakistan: A Review,” Environmental Science and Pollution Research 17:4963.Google Scholar
Colbeck, Ian, Nasir, Zaheer Ahmad, and Ali, Zulfiqar (2010b). “State of Indoor Air Quality in Pakistan: A Review,” Environmental Science and Pollution Research 17:1187–96.Google Scholar
Cole, Camille (2016). “From Forest to Delta: Recent Themes in South Asian Environmental History,” South Asian History and Culture 7/2:208–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corbridge, Stuart (1988). “The Ideology of Tribal Economy and Society: Politics in the Jharkhand, 1950–1980,” Modern Asian Studies 22:142.Google Scholar
Coutinho, Miguel, and Butt, Hamza (2014). “Environmental Impact Assessment Guidance for Coal Fired Power Plants in Pakistan (IUCN).Google Scholar
Crosby, Alfred (1972). The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492 (Greenwood).Google Scholar
Cullet, Philippe, and Koonan, Sujith (2011). Water Law in India: An Introduction to Legal Instruments (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Dale, Stephen (2004). Garden of the Eight Paradises (Brill).Google Scholar
Dalrymple, William, and Anand, Anita (2017). Koh-i-Noor: The History of the World’s Most Infamous Diamond (Bloomsbury).Google Scholar
Damodaran, A. (2010). Encircling the Seamless: India, Climate Change, and the Global Commons (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Damodaran, Vinita, Winterbottom, V., and Lester, A., eds. (2015). The East India Company and the Natural World (Palgrave).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dangwal, Dhirendra (2009). Himalayan Degradation: Colonial Forestry and Environmental Change in India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Valentine, Daniel E. (1987). Fluid Signs (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Das, Pallavi (2015). Colonialism, Development, and the Environment: Railways and Deforestation in British India, 1860–1884 (Palgrave).Google Scholar
Dasgupta, Susmita, Huq, Mainul, Zaman, Asif, et al. (2015). Urban Flooding of Greater Dhaka in a Changing Climate: Building Local Resilience to Disaster Risk (World Bank).Google Scholar
Davis, Mike (2002). Late Victorian Holocausts (Verso).Google Scholar
Delhi State Legal Services Authority (2017). Recommendations for Long Term Action Plan for Solid Waste Management in Delhi (Delhi State Legal Services Authority).Google Scholar
Dennell, Robin, and Petraglia, Michael (2012). “The Dispersal of Homo Sapiens across Southern Asia: How Early, How Often, How Complex,” Quaternary Science Reviews 47:1522.Google Scholar
Dewan, Ashraf, and Corner, Robert, eds. (2014). Dhaka Megacity: Geospacial Perspectives on Urbanisation, Environment and Health (Springer).Google Scholar
Digby, Simon (1971). Warhorse and Elephant in the Delhi Sultanate: A Study of Military Supplies (Orient Monographs).Google Scholar
Divan, Shyam, and Rosencranz, Armin (2001). Environmental Law and Polity in India: Cases, Materials and Statutes (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Divyabhanusinh, (2005). The Story of Asia’s Lions (Marg).Google Scholar
Donges, J. F., Donner, R. V., Marwan, N., et al. (2015). “Non-linear Regime Shifts in Holocene Asian Monsoon Variability: Potential Impacts on Cultural Change and Migratory Patterns,” Climate of the Past 11:709–41.Google Scholar
Doron, Assa, and Jeffrey, Robin (2018). Waste of Nation: Garbage and Growth in India (Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Drayton, Richard (2000). Nature’s Government: Science, Imperial Britain and the “Improvement” of the World (Yale University Press).Google Scholar
D’Souza, Rohan (2006a). Drowned and Dammed: Colonial Capitalism and Flood Control in Eastern India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
D’Souza, Rohan (2006b). “Water in British India: The Making of a ‘Colonial Hydrology’,” History Compass 4/4:621–28.Google Scholar
Duara, Prasenjit (2014). The Crisis of Global Modernity: Asian Traditions and a Sustainable Future (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Dubash, Navroz, ed. (2012). Handbook of Climate Change in India: Development, Politics, and Governance (Routledge).Google Scholar
Eaton, Richard (1993). Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760 (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Eaton, Richard, and Wagoner, Philip (2014). Power, Memory, Architecture: Contested Sites on India’s Deccan Plateau, 1300–1600 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Edney, Matthew (1987). Mapping an Empire: The Geographical Construction of British India, 1765–1843 (University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Elliot, H.M. (1873–77). History of India as Told by Its Own Historians, ed. Dowson, John, 8 vols. (Trubner).Google Scholar
Erenstein, Olaf (2010). “Comparative Analysis of Rice–Wheat Systems in Indian Haryana and Pakistan Punjab,” Land Use Policy 27:869–9l.Google Scholar
Falk, Nancy E. (1973). “Wilderness and Kingship in Ancient South Asia,” History of Religions 13/1:115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farooqi, Naim (1988). “Moguls, Ottomans, and Pilgrims,” International History Review, 10/2:198220.Google Scholar
Feldhaus, Anne (2003). Region, Pilgrimage, and Geographical Imagination in India (Palgrave MacMillan).Google Scholar
Fischer, Thomas (2014). Environmental Impact Assessment Handbook for Pakistan (IUCN).Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H. (2007). Visions of Mughal India (I.B. Tauris).Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H. (2015). A Short History of the Mughal Empire (I.B. Tauris).Google Scholar
Foltz, Richard, Frederick Denny, and Azizan Baharuddin (2003). Islam and Ecology: A Bestowed Trust (Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Gadgil, Madhav, and Guha, Ramachandra (1992). This Fissured Land: An Ecological History of India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Gadgil, Madhav, and Guha, Ramachandra (1995). Ecology and Equity: The Use and Abuse of Nature in Contemporary India (Routledge).Google Scholar
Gadgil, Madhav, and Thapar, Romila (1990). “Human Ecology in India: Some Historical Perspectives,” Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 15/3:209–23.Google Scholar
Gadgil, Madhav, and Vartak, V.D. (1975). “Sacred Groves of India: A Plea for Continued Conservation.” Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 72/2: 313–20.Google Scholar
Galley, Michael (2014). Shipbreaking: Hazards and Liabilities (Springer).Google Scholar
Gandhi, Indira (1972). “Speech” (Conference on the Human Environment).Google Scholar
Gandhi, Indira (1981). “Directive to Chief Ministers,” quoted in Divan and Rozencranz, p. 477.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas K. (1909). Indian Home Rule/Hind Swaraj (International Printing Press) [also available at www.mkgandhi.org (accessed 11/11/2017)].Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas K. (1948). The Story of My Experiments with Truth (Public Affairs Press).Google Scholar
Ganeshaiah, K. N., Shaanker, R. Uma, and Vasudeva, R. (2007). “Bio-resources and Empire Building: What Favored the Growth of Vijayanagar Empire,” Current Science 933/2:140–46.Google Scholar
Gangal, K., Sarson, Graeme R., and Shukurov, Anwar (2014). “Near-Eastern Roots of the Neolithic in South Asia,” PLoS ONE 9 (5)journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0095714.pone.0095714 (accessed 11/ 11/2017).Google Scholar
Ganjoo, R. K., and Ota, S. B. (2012). “Mountain Environment and Early Human Adaptation in NW Himalaya, India: A Case Study of Siwalik Hill Range and Leh Valley,” Quaternary International 269:31–7.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, David (1994). “Scientific Empire and Imperial Science: Colonialism and Irrigation Technology in the Indus Basin,” Journal of Asian Studies 53/4:1127–49.Google Scholar
Gilmartin, David (2015). Blood and Water: The Indus River Basin in Modern History (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Giosan, Liviu, Clift, Peter D., Macklin, Mark G., et al. (2012). “Fluvial landscapes of the Harappan Civilization,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109/26:10138–39.Google Scholar
Gold, Ann, and Gujar, Bhoja Ram (2002). In the Time of Trees and Sorrows: Nature, Power, and Memory in Rajasthan (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Gordon, Stewart (1993). Marathas, 1600–1818 (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Government of India (2005). Report of the Tiger Task Force: Joining the Dots (Ministry of Environment and Forests).Google Scholar
Government of India (2010). Report of the Elephant Task Force: Gajah: Securing the Future for Elephants in India, ed. Rangarajan, Mahesh et al. (Ministry of Environment and Forests).Google Scholar
Government of India (2013). Statistical Profile of Scheduled Tribes in India, 2nd ed. (Ministry of Tribal Affairs).Google Scholar
Government of Pakistan (2014). Vision Pakistan 2025: One Nation—One Vision (Ministry of Planning).Google Scholar
Govindrajan, Radhika (2018). Animal Intimacies: Interspecies Relations in India’s Central Himalayas (University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
The Graphic, London (June 1882).Google Scholar
Greenough, Paul (1982). Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Famine of 1943–44 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Greenough, Paul (2001). “Naturae Ferae: Wild Animals in South Asia and the Standard Ecological Narrative,” in Scott, James C, and Bhatt, Nina, eds., Agrarian Studies: Synthetic Work at the Cutting Edge (Yale University Press), pp. 141–85.Google Scholar
Grove, Richard (1993). “Conserving Eden: The (European) East India Companies and their Environmental Policies on St. Helena, Mauritius and in Western India, 1660 to 1854,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 35/2:318–51.Google Scholar
Grove, Richard (1995). Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860 (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Grove, Richard, Damodaran, Vinita, and Sangwan, Satpal, eds. (1998). Nature and the Orient: The Environmental History of South and Southeast Asia (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (1995). “Radical American Environmentalism and Wilderness Preservation: A Third World Critique” in Baird Callicot, J. and Nelson, Michael P, eds., The Great New Wilderness Debate (University of Georgia Press), pp. 271–79.Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (1997). “Mahatma Gandhi and the Environmental Movement” in Guha, Ramachandra and Martinez-Alier, Juan, eds., Varieties of Environmentalism: Essays North and South (Earthscan), pp. 153–68.Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (1999). Savaging the Civilized: Verrier Elwin, His Tribals, and India (University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (2000a). Environmentalism: A Global History (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (2000b). The Unquiet Woods: Ecological Change and Peasant Resistance in the Himalayas, 2nd ed. (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra (2006). How Much Should a Person Consume? Environmentalism in India and the United States (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit (1996). Rule of Property for Bengal, reprint (Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit, et al., eds. (1982–2012). Subaltern Studies, 12 vols. (Oxford University Press and Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Guha, Sumit (1999). Environment and Ethnicity in India, 1200–1991 (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Board, Gujarat Marine, http://www.gmbports.org/ship-recycling-yards (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Gunawardena, E.R.N., Brij Gopal, and Hemesiri Kotagama, eds. (2015). Ecosystems and Integrated Water Resources Management in South Asia (Routledge).Google Scholar
Gurukkal, Rajan (2015). “The Making and Proliferation of Jati: A Historical Inquiry,” Studies in History 31/1:3050.Google Scholar
Haberman, David (2006). River of Love in an Age of Pollution (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Haberman, David (2013). People Trees: Worship of Trees in Northern India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan (1982). Atlas of the Mughal Empire (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan (1999). Agrarian System of Mughal India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Habib, Irfan (2010). Man and Environment: The Ecological History of India, A People’s History of India (Aligarh Historians Society).Google Scholar
Habiba, Umma, Abedin, Md. Anwarul, Hassan, Abu Wali Raghib, and Shaw, Rajib (2015). Food Security and Risk Reduction in Bangladesh (Springer).Google Scholar
Haines, Daniel (2017). Rivers Divided: Indus Basin Waters in the Making of India and Pakistan (Hurst).Google Scholar
Hardiman, David (1995). “Small-Dam Systems of the Sahyadris,” in Arnold, David and Guha, Ramachandra, eds., Nature, Culture and Imperialism (Oxford University Press), pp. 185209.Google Scholar
Harappa.Com www.harappa.com (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Harrison, Mark (1999). Climates and Constitutions: Health, Race, Environment and British Imperialism in India, 1600–1850 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Hassan, Jawad (2001). “Country Report Pakistan Environmental Law,” Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law, 6/3&4:319–32.Google Scholar
Hassan, Parvez (2007). “Environmental Protection, Rule of Law and the Judicial Crisis in Pakistan,” Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law 10/3&4:167–81.Google Scholar
Hawkey, D.E. (2002). “The Peopling of South Asia: Evidence for Affinities and Microevolution of Prehistoric Populations from India/Sri Lanka,” Spolia Zeylanica 39:1300.Google Scholar
Hodiwala, Shahpurshah (1939–57). Studies in Indo-Muslim History; A Critical Commentary (S.H. Hodivala).Google Scholar
Hughes, Julie (2013). Animal Kingdoms: Hunting, the Environment, and Power in Indian Princely States (Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Hughes, Julie (2015). “Royal Tigers and Ruling Princes: Wilderness and Wildlife Management in the Indian Princely States,” Modern Asian Studies 49/4:1210–60.Google Scholar
Huq, S.M. Shoaib, Immamul, and Jalal Uddin, Muhammad (2013). Soils of Bangladesh (Springer).Google Scholar
Ibn Battuta, Muhammad (1976). Rehla, trans. Mahdi Husain (Oriental Institute); excerpted in Ross Dunn (1986). Adventures of Ibn Battuta (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Indian Genome Variation Consortium (2005). “The Indian Genome Variation Database (IGVdb): A Project Overview,” Human Genetics 118:111.Google Scholar
International Maritime Organization, www.imo.org/en/OurWork/Environment/ShipRecycling (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Iqbal, Iftekhar (2010). The Bengal Delta: Ecology, State and Social Change, 1840–1943 (Palgrave-MacMillan).Google Scholar
Iqbal, Mehreen, Brivik, Knut, Syed, Jabir Hussain, et al. (2015). “Emerging Issue of E-waste in Pakistan: A Review of Status, Research Needs and Data Gaps,” Environmental Pollution 207:308–18.Google Scholar
Mufakharul, Islam M. (1997). Irrigation, Agriculture and the Raj: Punjab, 1887–1947 (Manohar).Google Scholar
Jahangir, (1914). Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri, trans. Alexander Rogers, ed. Beveridge, Henry, 2 vols. (Royal Asiatic Society).Google Scholar
Jain, Pankaj (2011). Dharma and Ecology of Hindu Communities: Sustenance to Sustainability (Ashgate).Google Scholar
Jamison, Stephanie, and Brereton, Joel (2014). Rigveda: The Earliest Religious Poetry of India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Jalais, Annu (2010). Forest of Tigers: People, Politics, and Environment in the Sundarbans (Routledge).Google Scholar
Jewitt, Sarah (2000). “Mothering Earth? Gender and Environmental Protection in the Jharkhand, India,” Journal of Peasant Studies 27/2:94131.Google Scholar
Qureshi, Jhala Y. V. Q., and Gopal, R., eds. (2015). The Status of Tigers in India (National Tiger Conservation Authority).Google Scholar
Jinnah, Muhammad Ali (1947). Speeches and Writings, ed. Ahmad, Jamil-ud-Din, 2 vols. (Shaikh Muhammad Ashraf).Google Scholar
Johnson, Daniel (1822). Sketches of the Field Sports as Followed by the Natives of India (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Browne).Google Scholar
Kapur, Nandini Sinha (2011). Environmental History of Early India: A Reader (Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Karlsson, Bengt (2011). Unruly Hills: A Political Ecology of India’s Northeast (Berghahn).Google Scholar
Karlsson, Bengt, and Subba, Tanka B (2006). Indigeneity in India (Kegan Paul).Google Scholar
Kaul, Shonaleeka (2010). Imagining the Urban: Sanskrit and the City in Early India (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Kautilya, (2013). Arthashastra, trans. Patrick Olivelle as King, Governance, and Law in Ancient India: Kautilya’s Arthasastra (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark, (2000). “Wealth and Socioeconomic Hierarchies of the Indus Valley Civilization,” in Richards, Janet and Van Buren, Mary, eds., Order, Legitimacy, and Wealth in Ancient States (Cambridge University Press), pp. 88109.Google Scholar
Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark (2012). “The Indus Civilisation,” in Renfrew, Colin and Bahn, Paul, eds., Cambridge World Prehistory (Cambridge University Press), vol. 1, pp. 407–32.Google Scholar
Kent, Eliza (2013). Sacred Groves and Local Gods: Religion and Environmentalism in South India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Kerr, Ian (2007). Engines of Change: The Railroads that Made India (Praeger).Google Scholar
Khan, Saqi Mustaid (1947). Maasir-i ʿAlamgiri, trans. Jadunath Sarkar (Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal).Google Scholar
Khanna, Shomona, and Naveen, T. K. (2005). Contested Terrain: Forest Cases in the Supreme Court of India (Society for Rural Urban and Tribal Initiative).Google Scholar
Kidd, Ian (2012). “Biopiracy and the Ethics of Medical Heritage: The Case of India’s Traditional Knowledge Digital Library,” Journal of Medical Humanities 33/3:175–83.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benjamin (2018). An Imperial Disaster: The Bengal Cyclone of 1876 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Kingwell-Banham, Eleanor, Petrie, Cameron A., and Fuller, Dorian Q. (2015). “Early Agriculture in South Asia” in Barker, Graeme and Goucher, Candice, eds., Cambridge World History (Cambridge University Press), pp. 261–88.Google Scholar
Kiple, Kenneth (2006). “The History of Diseases,” in Porter, Roy, ed.,The Cambridge History of Medicine (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Klein, Ira (1984). “When the Rains Failed,” Indian Economic and Social History Review 21/2:185214.Google Scholar
Klein, Ira (1988). “Plague, Policy and Popular Unrest in British India,” Modern Asian Studies 22/4:723–55.Google Scholar
Klingensmith, Daniel (2007). “One Valley and a Thousand”: Dams, Nationalism, and Development (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Kolady, Deepthi, and Lesser, William (2012). “Genetically-engineered Crops and Their Effects on Varietal Diversity: A Case of Bt Eggplant in India,” Agriculture and Human Values 29:315.Google Scholar
Krishna, Sumi (2012). Agriculture and a Changing Environment in North-eastern India (Routledge).Google Scholar
Kumar, Deepak, Damodaran, Vinita, and D’Souza, Rohan, eds. (2011). The British Empire and the Natural World: Environmental Encounters in South Asia (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Kumar, Dharma, et al., eds. (1982–83). Cambridge Economic History of India, 2 vols. (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Kumar, Sunil (2007). The Emergence of the Delhi Sultanate, 1192–1286 (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala, and Samanta, Gopa (2013). Dancing with the River: People and Life on the Chars of South Asia (Yale University Press).Google Scholar
Lal, B. B., and Dikshit, K. N. (1985). “A 2000-Year-Old Feat of Hydraulic Engineering in India,” Archaeology 38/1:4853.Google Scholar
Lal, Vinay (2000a). “Gandhi and the Ecological Vision of Life: Thinking beyond Deep Ecology,” Environmental Ethics 72:149–68.Google Scholar
Lal, Vinay (2000b). “Too Deep for Deep Ecology: Gandhi and the Ecological Vision of Life” in Chapple, Christopher Key and Tucker, Mary Evelyn, eds., Hinduism and Ecology (Harvard University Press), pp. 183212.Google Scholar
Lele, Sharachchandra, and Menon, Ajit, eds. (2014). Democratizing Forest Governance in India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Lewis, Michael (2005). “Indian Science for India’s Tigers?: Conservation Biology and the Question of Cultural Values,” Journal of the History of Biology 38:185207.Google Scholar
Lewis, Michael (2007). “The Personal Equation: Political Economy and Social Technology on India’s Canals, 1850–1930,” Modern Asian Studies 41/5:967–94.Google Scholar
Locke, Piers, and Buckingham, Jane, eds. (2016). Rethinking Human-Elephant Relations in South Asia: Conflict, Negotiation and Coexistence (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Ludden, David (1999). An Agrarian History of South Asia (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
MacGeorge, G.W. (1894). Ways and Works in India: Being an Account of the Public Works in that Country from the Earliest Times up to the Present Day (Archibald Constable).Google Scholar
MacKenzie, John M. (1988). The Empire of Nature: Hunting, Conservation and British Imperialism (Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
McNeill, J.R. (2003). “Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History,” History and Theory 42:543.Google Scholar
McNeill, John, Jose Augusto Padua, and Mahesh Rangarajan, eds. (2010). Environmental History: As If Nature Existed (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Madsen, Stig Toft, ed. (1999). State, Society and the Environment in South Asia (Curzon).Google Scholar
Malhotra, Kailash C., Gokhale, Yogesh, and Das, Ketaki (2001). Sacred Groves of India: An Annotated Bibliography (Development Alliance).Google Scholar
Mann, Michael (2007). “Delhi’s Belly: On the Management of Water, Sewage and Excreta in a Changing Urban Environment during the Nineteenth Century,” Studies in History 23/1 n.s.:131.Google Scholar
Mann, Michael (2013). “Environmental History and Historiography on South Asia: Context and Some Recent Publications,” Südasien-Chronik-South Asia Chronicle 3:324–57.Google Scholar
Manu, (2004). The Law Code of Manu, trans. Patrick Olivelle (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Marx, Karl (1853). “The Future Results of British Rule in India,” in New York Daily Tribune (8 August).Google Scholar
Mathur, Ajeet (2003). “Who Owns Traditional Knowledge?,” Economic and Political Weekly 2003:4471–81.Google Scholar
Mawdsley, Emma (2004). “India’s Middle Classes and the Environment,” Development and Change 35/1:79103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mawdsley, Emma (2006). “Hindu Nationalism, Neo-traditionalism and Environmental Discourses in India,” Geoforum 37:380–90.Google Scholar
Mayewski, Paul, Rohling, Eelco E., Stager, J. Curt, et al. (2004). “Holocene Climate Variability,” Quaternary Research 62:243–55.Google Scholar
Menon, Ajit, Hinnewinkel, Christelle, and Guillerme, Sylvie (2013). “Denuded Forests, Wooded Estates: Statemaking in a Janmam Area of Gudalur, Tamil Nadu,” Indian Economic and Social History Review 50/4:449–71.Google Scholar
Menzies, Robert (2010). “Forest Paradigms in Vrat Kathas,” Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture 4/2:140–49.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas (2002). An Imperial Vision: Indian Architecture and Britain’s Raj (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Minsky, Lauren (2015). “Of Health and Harvests: Seasonal Mortality and Commercial Rice Cultivation in the Punjab and Bengal Regions of South Asia,” in Bray, Francesca, Coclanis, Peter A., Fields-Black, Edda L., and Schafer, Dagmar, eds., Rice: Global Networks and New Histories (Cambridge University Press), pp. 245–74.Google Scholar
Misra, V.N. (2001). “Prehistoric Human Colonization of India,” Journal of Bioscience 26/4:491531.Google Scholar
Moin, Ahmed Azfar (2012). Millennial Sovereign (Columbia University Press).Google Scholar
Mollinga, Peter (2003). On the Waterfront: Water Distribution, Technology and Agrarian Change in a South Indian Canal Irrigation System (Orient Blackswan).Google Scholar
Mollinga, Peter (2015). “Farmers’ Suicides as Public Death: Politics, Agency and Statistics in a Suicide-Prone District (South India),” Modern Asian Studies 40/5:1580–605.Google Scholar
Momtaz, S. (2002). “Environmental Assessment in Bangladesh: A Critical Review,” Environmental Impact Assessment Review 22:163–79.Google Scholar
Moor, Raphaelle, and Rajeev Gowda, M.V., eds. (2014). India’s Risks: Democratizing the Management of Threats to Environment, Health, and Values (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Morrison, Kathleen (2014). “Conceiving Ecology and Stopping the Clock: Narratives of Balance, Loss, and Degradation” in Rangarajan, Mahesh and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds., Shifting Ground (Oxford University Press), pp. 3964.Google Scholar
Mosse, David (2003). The Rule of Water: Statecraft, Ecology, and Collective Action in South India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Mukherjee, Janam (2017). Hungry Bengal: War, Famine and the End of Empire (Hurst).Google Scholar
Murali, Atluri (1995). “Whose Trees? Forest Practices and Local Communities in Andhra, 1600–1922,” in Arnold, David and Guha, Ramachandra, eds., Nature, Culture, Imperialism (Oxford University Press), pp. 86122.Google Scholar
Mustafa, Daanish (2013). Water Resource Management in a Vulnerable World: The Hydro-hazardscapes of Climate Change (I.B. Tauris).Google Scholar
Muzaffar, Sabir Bin, Islam, M. Anwarul, Kabir, Dihider Shahriar, et al. (2011). “The Endangered Forests of Bangladesh: Why the Process of Implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity Is Not Working,” Biodiversity and Conservation 20:1587–601.Google Scholar
Nadeem, Obaidullah, and Hameed, Rizwan (2008). “A Critical Review of the Adequacy of EIA Reports—Evidence from Pakistan,” International Journal of Environmental, Chemical, Ecological, Geological and Geophysical Engineering 2/11:146–53.Google Scholar
Nagendra, Harini (2016). Nature in the City: Bengaluru in the Past, Present, and Future (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Nair, Janaki (2005). The Promise of the Metropolis: Bangalore’s Twentieth Century (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Nandimath, O.V. (2009). Oxford Handbook of Environmental Decision Making in India: An EIA Model (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Narain, Vishal, and Prakash, Anjal, eds. (2016). Water Security in Peri-Urban South Asia: Adapting to Climate Change and Urbanization (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Nehru, Jawaharlal (1947). Discovery of India (Meridian).Google Scholar
Nehru, Jawaharlal (1954). “Speech Inaugurating the Bhakra-Nangal Dam” (8 July) http://celebratingnehru.org/english/nehru_speech4.aspx (accessed 11/ 11/2017).Google Scholar
Nehru, Jawaharlal (1956). “Forward,” in Gee, E.P., Why Preserve Wildlife? (Indian Board of Wildlife).Google Scholar
Nelson, Lance, ed. (1998). Purifying the Earthly Body of God: Religion and Ecology in India (State University of New York Press).Google Scholar
Niazi, Tarique (2004). “Rural Poverty and the Green Revolution: The Lessons from Pakistan,” Journal of Peasant Studies 31/2:242–60.Google Scholar
Nilakanta Shastri, K.A., and Venkataramayayya, N., eds. (1946). Further Sources of Vijayanagara History, 3 vols. (University of Madras).Google Scholar
Nilsen, Alf (2012). Dispossession and Resistance in India: The River and the Rage (Routledge).Google Scholar
Nugteren, Albertina (2005). Belief, Bounty, and Beauty: Rituals around Sacred Trees in India (Brill).Google Scholar
Nugteren, Albertina (2008). “Darubrahma: The Continuing Story of Wood, Trees, and Forests in the Ritual Fabric of Jagannath,” Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture 2/1:49.Google Scholar
O’Flaherty, Wendy Doniger, trans. (1981). Selected Hymns from the Vedas (Penguin).Google Scholar
Olivelle, Patrick (2016). “Science of Elephants in Kautilya’s Arthasastra,” in Locke, Piers and Buckingham, Jane, eds., Conflict, Negotiation, and Coexistence (Oxford University Press), pp. 7491.Google Scholar
Owen, Lewis A., Finkel, Robert C., and Caffee, Marc W. (2002). “Note on the Extent of Glaciation throughout the Himalaya during the Global Last Glacial Maximum,” Quaternary Science Reviews 21:147–57.Google Scholar
Pandian, Anand (2001). “Predatory Care: The Imperial Hunt in Mughal and British India,” Journal of Historical Sociology 14/1:79107.Google Scholar
Pandian, Anand, and Ali, Doud, eds. (2010). Ethical Life in South Asia (Indiana University Press).Google Scholar
Panigrahi, Jitendra K., and Amirapun, Susruta (2012). “Assessment of EIA System in India,” Environmental Impact Assessment Review 35:2336.Google Scholar
Parkhill, Thomas (1995). The Forest Setting in Hindu Epics: Princes, Sages, Demons (Mellen University Press).Google Scholar
Patak, A. (2002). Law, Strategies, Ideologies: Legislating Forests in Colonial India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Patel, Raj (2013). “The Long Green Revolution,” Journal of Peasant Studies 40/1:163.Google Scholar
Patton, Laurie (2000). “Nature Romanticism and Sacrifice in Rigvedic Interpretation,” in Chapple, Christopher Key and Tucker, Mary Evelyn, eds., Hinduism and Ecology (Harvard University Press), pp. 3958.Google Scholar
Pawson, Eric (2008). “Plants, Mobilities and Landscapes: Environmental Histories of Botanical Exchange,” Geography Compass 2:1464–77.Google Scholar
Petraglia, M.D., and Allchin, B., eds. (2007). Evolution and History of Human Populations in South Asia (Springer).Google Scholar
Petraglia, Michael, Ditchfield, Peter, Jones, Sacha, et al. (2012). “The Toba Volcanic Super-Eruption, Environmental Change, and Hominin Occupation History in India over the Last 140,000 Years,” Quaternary International 258:119–34.Google Scholar
Pollock, Sheldon (1991). “The Ramayana: Myth and Romance?,” in Robert Goldman, trans., The Ramayana of Valmiki, Volume III: Aranyakanda (Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Pollock, Sheldon (2006). The Language of the Gods in the World of Men: Sanskrit, Culture, and Power in Premodern India (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Possehl, Gregory (2002). The Indus Civilization: A contemporary perspective (Altamira).Google Scholar
Prakash, Anjal, Singh, Sreoshi, Goodrich, C. G., and Janakarajan, S., eds. (2013). Water Resources Policies in South Asia (Routledge).Google Scholar
Prasad, Archana (2003). Against Ecological Romanticism: Verrier Elwin and the Making of an Anti-Modern Tribal Identity (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Prashad, Vijay (2001). “Technology of Sanitation in Colonial Delhi,” Modern Asian Studies 35/1:113–55.Google Scholar
Rademacher, Anne, and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds. (2013). Ecologies of Urbanism in India: Metropolitan Civility and Sustainability (Hong Kong University Press).Google Scholar
Rahman, S. M. Mizanur, Robert M. Handler, and Audrey L. Mayer, (2016). “Life Cycle Assessment of Steel in the Ship Recycling Industry in Bangladesh,” Journal of Cleaner Production 135:963–71.Google Scholar
Rajagopalan, R. (2011). Environmental Studies: From Crisis to Cure, 2nd ed. (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Rajan, Ravi (2006). Modernizing Nature: Forestry and Imperial Eco-Development, 1800–1950 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Ramanathan, A. L., Johnston, Scott, Mukherjee, Abhijit, and Nath, Bibhash, eds. (2015). Safe and Sustainable Use of Arsenic-Contaminated Aquifers in the Gangetic Plain: A Multidisciplinary Approach (Springer).Google Scholar
Ramanujan, A. K. (1967). Interior Landscape: Love Poems from a Classical Tamil Anthology (Indiana University Press).Google Scholar
Ramesh, Jairam (2015). Green Signals: Ecology, Growth, and Democracy in India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh (1996a). “Environmental Histories of South Asia: A Review Essay,” Environment and History 2 /2:129–43.Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh (1996b). Fencing the Forests: Conservation and Ecological Change in India’s Central Provinces, 1860–1914 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh (2013). “Animals with Rich Histories: The Case of the Lions of the Gir Forest, Gujarat, India,” History and Theory 52:109–27.Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh, ed. (2007). Environmental Issues in India (Pearson).Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh, and Shahabuddin, G. (2006). “Debate: Displacement and Relocation from Protected Areas: Towards Biological and Historical Synthesis,” Conservation and Society, 4/3:359–78.Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh, and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds. (2012). India’s Environmental History, 2 vols. (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh, and Sivaramakrishnan, K., eds. (2014). Shifting Ground: People, Animals, and Mobility in India’s Environmental History (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Rao, Neema A. (2008). Forest Ecology in India: Colonial Maharashtra 1850–1950 (Foundation).Google Scholar
Rashid, Harun, and Paul, Bimal (2014). Climate Change in Bangladesh: Confronting Impending Disasters (Lexington).Google Scholar
Rashkow, Ezra (2014). “Idealizing Inhabited Wilderness: A Revision to the History of Indigenous Peoples and National Parks,” History Compass 12/10: 818–32.Google Scholar
Rashkow, Ezra (2015). “Resistance to Hunting in Pre-independence India: Religious Environmentalism, Ecological Nationalism or Cultural Conservation?,” Modern Asian Studies 49/2:270301.Google Scholar
Rastogi, Archi, Hickey, Gordon M., Badola, Ruchi, and Hussain, Syed Ainul (2012). “Saving the Superstar: A Review of the Social Factors Affecting Tiger Conservation in India,” Journal of Environmental Management 113:328–40.Google Scholar
Rawat, Ajay, ed. (1991). History of Forestry in India (Indus).Google Scholar
Ray, Binayak (2008). Water: The Looming Crisis in India (Lexington).Google Scholar
Ray, Binayak (2011). Climate Change: IPCC, Water Crisis, and Policy: Riddles with Reference to India and Her Surroundings (Lexington).Google Scholar
Ribbentrop, B. (1900). Forestry in British India (Government of India).Google Scholar
Richards, John (1993). Mughal Empire (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Richards, John (2003). The Unending Frontier: Environmental History in the Early Modern Centuries (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Richards, John, Hagen, James R., and Haynes, Edward (1985). “Changing Land Use in Bihar, Punjab and Haryana, 1850–1970,” Modern Asian Studies 19/3: 699732.Google Scholar
Rinku, Murgai (2001). “Post-Green Revolution in Indian and Pakistani Punjabs,” World Bank Research Observer 16/2:199218.Google Scholar
Robbins Schug, Gwen, Murgai, Rinku, Ali, Mubarik, and Byerlee, Derek (2013). “Infection, Disease, and Biosocial Processes at the End of the Indus Civilization,” PLoS ONE 8 (12) journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0084814 (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Roth, Dik, and Vincent, Linden, eds. (2013). Controlling Water: Matching Technology and Institutions in Irrigation Management in India and Nepal (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Roy, R.C., and Roy, S.C. (1937). The Kharias, 2 vols. (Catholic Press).Google Scholar
Saberwal, Vasant (1999). Pastoral Politics: Shepherds, Bureaucrats, and Conservation in the Western Himalaya (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Saberwal, Vasant, and Rangarajan, Mahesh (2005). Battles Over Nature: Science and the Politics of Conservation (Orient Blackswan).Google Scholar
Saikia, Arupjyoti (2011). Forests and Ecological History of Assam (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sarasvati, Rangasvami (1925). “Political Maxims of the Emperor-Poet Krishnadeva Raya,” Journal of Indian History 4/3:6188.Google Scholar
Saravanan, Velayutham (2016). Colonialism, Environment and Tribals in South India, 1792–1947 (Routledge).Google Scholar
Satya, Laxman (1997). Cotton and Famine in Berar, 1850–1900 (Manohar).Google Scholar
Schwartzberg, Joseph, ed. (1978). Historical Atlas of South Asia (University of Chicago Press). [also available at dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/schwartzberg" (accessed 11/11/2017)].Google Scholar
Sekhar, Nagothu (2013). “Local People’s Attitudes toward Conservation and Wildlife Tourism around Sariska Tiger Reserve, India,” Journal of Environmental Management 689:339–47.Google Scholar
Sengupta, Nirmal (1980). “Indigenous Irrigation Organisation in South Bihar,” Indian Economic and Social History Review 37/2:157–87.Google Scholar
Shah, Alpa (2007). “The Dark Side of Indigeneity?: Indigenous People, Rights and Development in India,” History Compass 5/6:1806–32.Google Scholar
Shah, Alpa (2010). In the Shadows of the State: Indigenous Politics, Environmentalism and Insurgency in Jharkhand, India (Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Shah, Julia, Sutcliffe, John, Lloyd-Smith, Lindsay, et al. (2007). “Ancient Irrigation and Buddhist History in Central India: Optically Stimulated Luminescence Dates and Pollen Sequences from the Sanchi Dams,” Asian Perspectives 46/1:166201.Google Scholar
Shahabuddin, Ghazala (2010). Conservation at the Crossroads: Science, Society and the Future of India’s Wildlife (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Shahabuddin, Ghazala, and Rangarajan, Mahesh, eds. (2007). Making Conservation Work: Securing Biodiversity in This New Century (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Sharan, Awadhendra (2014). In the City, Out of Place: Nuisance, Pollution, and Dwelling in Delhi, c.1850–2000 (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sharma, Mukul (2012). Green and Saffron: Hindu Nationalism and Indian Environmental Politics (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Sharma, R.S. (1987). Urban Decay in India (c.300–c.1000) (Munshiram Manoharlal).Google Scholar
Shipbreaking Platform, www.shipbreakingplatform.org (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Shiva, Vandana (1988). Staying Alive: Women, Ecology, and Survival in India (Kali for Women).Google Scholar
Shiva, Vandana (1997). Biopiracy: The Plunder of Nature and Knowledge (South End Press).Google Scholar
Shiva, Vandana (2007). “Bioprospecting as Sophisticated Biopiracy,” Signs 32/2: 307–13.Google Scholar
Shiva, Vandana, and Bandyopadhyay, J. (1986). “The Evolution, Structure, and Impact of the Chipko Movement,” Mountain Research and Development 6/2:133–42.Google Scholar
Singh, Bhasha (2014). Unseen: The Truth about India’s Manual Scavengers, trans. Reenu Talwar (Penguin).Google Scholar
Singh, Chetan (1995). “Forests, Pastoralist and Agrarian Society in Mughal India,” in Arnold, David and Guha, Ramachandra, eds., Nature, Culture, Imperialism (Oxford University Press), pp. 2148.Google Scholar
Singh, Satyajit (2016). The Local in Governance: Politics, Decentralization, and Environment (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sinha, Anushree, Bauer, Armin, and Bullen, Paul, eds. (2015). The Environments of the Poor in South Asia: Simultaneously Reducing Poverty, Protecting the Environment, and Adapting to Climate Change (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sinha, Ashish, Cannariato, Kevin G., Stott, Lowell D., et al. (2007). “A 900-Year (600 to 1500 A.D.) Record of the Indian Summer Monsoon Precipitation from the Core Monsoon Zone of India,” Geophysical Research Letters 34:15.Google Scholar
Sinopoli, Carla (2015). “Ancient South Asian Cities in Their Regions,” in Norman Yoffe, ed. Cambridge World History (Cambridge University Press), vol. 3, pp. 319–42.Google Scholar
Sinopoli, Carla, and Morrison, Kathleen (1995). “Dimensions of Imperial Control: The Vijayanagara Capital,” American Anthropologist 97/1 n.s.:8396.Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K. (1999). Modern Forests: Statemaking and Environmental Change in Colonial Eastern India (Stanford University Press).Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K. (2000). “State Sciences and Development Histories: Encoding Local Forestry Knowledge in Bengal,” in Doornbos, Martin, Saith, Ashwani, and White, Ben, eds., Forests: Nature, People, Power (Blackwell), pp. 6188.Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K. (2008). “Science, Environment and Empire History: Comparative Perspectives from Forests in Colonial India,” Environment and History 14/1:4165.Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K. (2011). “Environment, Law and Democracy in India,” Journal of Asian Studies 70/4:905–28.Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K. (2015). “Ethics of Nature in Indian Environmental History,” Modern Asian Studies 49/4:1261–310.Google Scholar
Sivaramakrishnan, K., and Agrawal, Arun, eds. (2003). Regional Modernities: The Cultural Politics of Development in India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Skariya, Ajay (1999). Hybrid Histories: Forests, Frontiers, and Wildness in Western India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Snodgrass, Jeffrey G., Sharma, Satish Kumar, Jhala, Yuvraj Singh, et al. (2008). “Lovely Leopards, Frightful Forests: The Environmental Ethics of Indigenous Rajasthani Shamans,” Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture 2/1:3054.Google Scholar
Srinivas, M.N. (1952). Religion and Society among the Coorgs of South India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Stebbing, E. P. (1926). The Forests of India, 3 vols. (John Lane).Google Scholar
Stein, Burton (1989). Vijayanagara (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Stoddard, Brian (2009). Land, Water, Language and Politics in Andhra: Regional Evolution in India since 1850 (Routledge).Google Scholar
Stoker, Valerie (2016). Polemics and Patronage in the City of Victory: Vyasathirta, Hindu Sectarianism, and the Sixteenth-Century Vijayanagara Court (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Stone, Ian (1984). Canal Irrigation in British India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Strahorn, Eric (2009). An Environmental History of Postcolonial North India: The Himalayan Tarai in Uttar Pradesh and Uttaranchal (Peter Lang).Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (2005). Explorations in Connected History, 2 vols. (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sultana, Farhana (2009). “Fluid Lives: Subjectivities, Gender and Water in Rural Bangladesh,” Gender, Place and Culture 16/4:427–44.Google Scholar
Sundar, Nandini, Jeffery, Roger, and Thin, Neil (2001). Branching Out, Joint Forest Management in Four Indian States (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sutter, Paul (2003). “Reflections: What Can US Environmental Historians Learn from Non-US Environmental Historiography?,” Environmental History 8/1: 109–29.Google Scholar
Talbot, Ian (2015). Pakistan: A New History, 2nd ed. (Hurst).Google Scholar
Tandon, Prakash (1968). Punjabi Century (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Abdul, Thaha S. (2009). Forest Policy and Ecological Change: Hyderabad State in Colonial India (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Thapar, Romila (1997). Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryas (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Thapar, Romila (2001). “Perceiving the Forest: Early India,” Studies in History 17/1 n.s.:116.Google Scholar
Thapar, Valmik, ed. (2001). Saving Wild Tigers, 1900–2000 (Permanent Black).Google Scholar
Tomalin, Emma (2009). Biodivinity and Biodiversity: The Limits to Religious Environmentalism (Ashgate).Google Scholar
Trautmann, Thomas (2015). Elephants and Kings: An Environmental History (University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Tucker, Richard (2012). A Forest History of India (Sage).Google Scholar
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, “Nationally Determined Contributions,” www4.unfccc.int/Submissions/INDC/Submission%20Pages/submissions.aspx (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Valentine, Benjamin, Kamenov, George D., Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark, et al. (2015). “Evidence for Patterns of Selective Urban Migration in the Greater Indus Valley (2600–1900 BC): A Lead and Strontium Isotope Mortuary Analysis,” PLoS ONE 10 (4) journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0123103 (accessed 11/11/2017).Google Scholar
Valmiki, (1984–2017). Ramayana, trans. Robert Goldman et al., 7 vols. (Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Varma, Supriya (1991). “Villages Abandoned: The Case for Mobile Pastoralism in Post-Harappan Gujarat,” Studies in History 7/2 n.s.:279300.Google Scholar
Vishwanathan, H., Deepa, E., Cordaux, R., et al. (2004). “Genetic Structure and Affinities among Tribal Populations of Southern India,” Annals of Human Genetics 68:128–38.Google Scholar
Vyasa, (1973–2003). Mahabharata, trans. J. A. B. van Buitenen and James L. Fitzgerald, 4 vols. (University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Wanner, Heinz, Beer, Jurg, Butikofer, Jonathan, et al. (2008). “Mid- to Late Holocene Climate Change: An Overview,” Quaternary Science Reviews 30:138.Google Scholar
Wath, Sushant, Dutt, P. S., and Chakrabarti, T. (2011). “E-waste Scenario in India, Its Management and Implications,” Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 172:249–62.Google Scholar
Weber, Thomas (1989). Hugging the Trees: The Story of the Chipko Movement (Penguin).Google Scholar
Werner, Hanna (2015). The Politics of Dams: Developmental Perspective and Social Critique in Modern India (Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Whitcombe, Elizabeth (1972). Agrarian Conditions in Northern India: The United Provinces under British Rule, 1860–1900 (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Wilhelm, Janine (2016). Environment and Pollution in Colonial India: Sewerage Technologies Along the Sacred Ganges (Routledge).Google Scholar
Wink, Andre (1990–2004). Al Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World, 3 vols. (Brill).Google Scholar
Bank, World (2006a). Dhaka, Bangladesh Country Analysis, Bangladesh Development Series, Paper No. 12.Google Scholar
Bank, World (2006b). Pakistan, Strategic Country Environmental Assessment, 2 vols. Report 36946-PK.Google Scholar
Bank, World (2016). Pakistan: (Intended) Nationally Determined Contribution (World Bank).Google Scholar
Wright, Rita (2010). The Ancient Indus: Urbanism, Economy, Society (Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Xu, Hai, Yeager, Kevin M., Lan, Jainghu, et al. (2015). “Abrupt Holocene Indian Summer Monsoon Failures: A Primary Response to Solar Activity?,” The Holocene 25(4):677–85.Google Scholar
Zeheter, Michael (2015). Epidemics, Empire and Environments: Cholera in Madras and Quebec City, 1818–1910 (University of Pittsburgh Press).Google Scholar
Zimmermann, Francis (1987). The Jungle and the Aroma of Meats: An Ecological Theme in Hindu Medicine (University of California Press).Google Scholar
Zvelebil, Kamil (1975). Tamil Literature (Brill).Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Michael H. Fisher, Oberlin College, Ohio
  • Book: An Environmental History of India
  • Online publication: 12 October 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316276044.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Michael H. Fisher, Oberlin College, Ohio
  • Book: An Environmental History of India
  • Online publication: 12 October 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316276044.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Michael H. Fisher, Oberlin College, Ohio
  • Book: An Environmental History of India
  • Online publication: 12 October 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316276044.014
Available formats
×