ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT
The environmental movement,
a term that includes conservation and green politics, is a diverse scientific,
social, and political movement for addressing environmental issues. Environmentalists
advocate the sustainable management of resources and stewardship of the environment
through changes in public policy and individual behavior. In its recognition of
humanity as a participant in (not enemy of) ecosystems, the movement is
centered on ecology, health, and human rights.
The environmental movement is an
international movement, represented by a range of organizations, from the large
to grassroots and varies from country to country. Due to its large membership,
varying and strong beliefs, and occasionally speculative nature, the
environmental movement is not always united in its goals. At its broadest, the
movement includes private citizens, professionals, religious devotees,
politicians, scientists, nonprofit organizations and individual advocates.
Chipko Movement
The forests of India are a critical resource for the
subsistence of rural peoples throughout the country, but especially in hill and
mountain areas, both because of their direct provision of food, fuel and fodder
and because of their role in stabilising soil and water resources. As these
forests have been increasingly felled for commerce and industry, Indian
villagers have sought to protect their livelihoods through the Gandhian method
of satyagraha non-violent resistence. In the 1970s and 1980s this resistance to
the destruction of forests spread throughout India and became organised and
known as the Chipko Movement.
The first Chipko action took place spontaneously in
April 1973 and over the next five years spread to many districts of the
Himalaya in Uttar Pradesh. The name of the movement comes from a word meaning
'embrace': the villagers hug the trees, saving them by interposing their bodies
between them and the contractors' axes. The Chipko protests in Uttar Pradesh
achieved a major victory in 1980 with a 15-year ban on green felling in the
Himalayan forests of that state by order of India's then Prime Minister, Indira
Gandhi. Since then the movement has spread to Himachal Pradesh in the North,
Kamataka in the South, Rajasthan in the West, Bihar in the East and to the
Vindhyas in Central India. In addition to the 15-year ban in Uttar Pradesh, the
movement has stopped clear felling in the Western Ghats and the Vindhyas and
generated pressure for a natural resource policy which is more sensitive to
people's needs and ecological requirements
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