Drowned and Dammed
Colonial Capitalism and Flood Control in Eastern India
Format:Paperback
Publisher:OUP India
Published:25th Aug '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The water question in India has several contentious dimensions, be they inter-state river disputes, groundwater extraction by private corporations, farmer agitations for irrigation water, or urban anxieties over meeting water needs. Rohan D'Souza argues that the British project of flood control in the Orissa Delta was principally political in intent, aimed at anchoring their presence in the area. In Drowned and Dammed he comprehensively reconsiders the debate on the colonial environmental watershed and its hydraulic legacy in India. Colonial capitalism sought to dominate the Orissa Delta's many rivers by bringing about an unprecedented ecological rupture. Through the rubric of flood control, British rule instituted capitalist private property in land and re- shaped the region's hydrology with physical infrastructures such as embankments, canal networks, and dams. The Orissa delta was thus dramatically transformed from a flood-dependent agrarian regime into a flood-vulnerable landscape.
D'Souza clearly positions his work within the scope of a historically informed political ecology, as he establishes from the outset. * Sören Köpke, International Institute for Asian Studies *
ISBN: 9780199469130
Dimensions: 216mm x 142mm x 19mm
Weight: 336g
290 pages