Living with the Weather: Climate Change, Ecology and Displacement in South AsiaPiya Srinivasan How does climate change intensify social cleavages in new configurations of knowledge and power? How does development respond to its own contradictions in such scenarios? How do extreme weather events inform population movement and challenge existing definitions of borders and citizenship? Who pays the heaviest price? Living with the Weather addresses these pressing questions by highlighting and exploring the social, economic, political, and spatial dimensions of climate disaster in South Asia. Through empirical research, reporting and documentation of the climate crisis in the countries of South Asia, along with a deep dive into the Indian Sundarbans, the book calls attention to the intermeshed predicaments the people of the subcontinent face while bearing the brunt of climate change In doing so, it seeks to enrich our understanding of how climate change transforms everyday life. It makes visible the effects of natural events, the outcomes of political decisions, how disaster and rehabilitation are interpreted by states, how resistances are staged in the form of mobility, and how dispossession and despair are embodied and articulated. |
Contents
In | 50 |
and Migrant Accounts from Western India | 97 |
Coping with Livelihood | 147 |
War Conflict Climate Change and Internal | 173 |
Ecology Land and Capitalist Development | 213 |
Climate Disaster | 239 |
The Invisible Journey | 270 |
Navigating Cyclones and Covid19 | 289 |
Podcast transcripts for the project Climate | 295 |
About the Editor and Authors | 353 |



