the Institute of Development Studies and partner organisations
Browse
- No file added yet -

Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness

Download (585.33 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-06, 07:40 authored by Linda Waldman, Ramila Bisht, Meghana Arora, Ritu Priya Mehrotra, Fiona Marshall, Rajashree Saharia, Abhinav Kapoor, Bushra Rizvi, Yasir Hamid, Ima Chopra, Kumud T. Sawansi
This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people’s acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India’s capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people’s emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories’ emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats associated with gandapani. Some people take preventative actions to avoid exposure while others do not acknowledge health implications. By contrast, industrial pollution is widely noted and frequently commented upon, but little collective action addresses this. The paper explores how the characteristics of Karhera, its heterogeneous population, diverse forms of environmental pollution, and broader governance processes, limit the potential for citizen action against pollution.

Funding

Default funder

History

Publisher

MDPI

Citation

Waldman, L. et al. (2017) 'Peri-Urbanism in Globalizing India: A Study of Pollution, Health and Community Awareness', Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 980

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

© 2017 by the authors.

Country

India

Language

en

Project identifier

Default project::9ce4e4dc-26e9-4d78-96e9-15e4dcac0642::600

Usage metrics

    ESRC STEPS Centre

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC