Patrick
McCloskey, Mountain Research and Development, Volume 22
(2), 2002, pp. 201-203.
"The
stories in these two videos (Pastoral Politics and Turf Wars) tell a cautionary
tale of the requirement for government administrators,
who are charged with the important task of protecting
their country's ecodiversity, to be sensitive to and respectful
of the needs and knowledge of local people who have lived
in the area for generations and whose livelihoods are
entwined with the environment. Both films raise interesting
and important issues around the need to balance ecological
concerns with traditional use and caution against top-down
solutions that fail either to understand or to take into
account either the local environment or lifestyles. The
videos are well shot and competently edited (and show
those of us who have never been there the beauty of this
mountainous area of India); but their greatest strength
lies in their commitment to telling the stories of people
who would not otherwise get an audience beyond their village."
Michael Dove and Carol Carpenter, School of Forestry
and Environmental Studies, Yale University
"Pastoral
Politics" is a pioneering effort to transcend the usual
cinematic portrayals of the "other", of people who live
by systems of resource-use that are no longer familiar
to the industrialized West. It accomplishes this, first,
by demythologizing pastoralists, in particular their image
as removed from everyday society: one Gaddi pastoralist
in the film spent twenty years in the Indian military
and police service before retiring to pastoralism. After
debunking this and other myths, the film-makers courageously
refrain from replacing them with equally essentializing
myths of their own making. The film is an almost Rashomon-like
portrayal of the way that the Gaddi are differently perceived
by different parties, including academics, activitsts,
forest service officers and the Gaddi themselves. The
film-makers eloquently demonstrate that one of the most
central questions for the Gaddi is not simply who they
are and how they should use those resources, but who we
think they are and how we think they should use those
resources, and ultimately, what these visions tells us
not just about the Gaddi but about ourselves.
Arun
Agrawal, Department of Political Science, Yale University
The
video Pastoral Politics examines the politics of herding
and grazing in Himachal Pradesh, India. It is a thoughtful
and carefully crafted story of migrant herders. Its main
focus is on the interactions of pastoralists with government
agencies and farmers, and inter-generational conflicts
within pastoralist society. The film demonstrates
the flaw inherent in trying to settle migrant herders,
and in believing that pastoralist livelihoods and migrations
are necessarily harmful to the environment. Instead, the
film points to how herders lead a finely balanced existence
between competing demands of politics, economics, and
ecology.
Nancy
Peluso, School of Management, Research and Policy on the
Environment, Unieversity of California, Berkeley.
Pastoral
Politics provides an informed and nuanced view of contemporary
resource politics around grazing and transhumance in the
Indian Himalayas. Set in the state of Himachal Pradesh,
the film-makers introduce us to Gaddi herders, mountain
agriculturists, urban-based government resource managers,
and activist-scholars who tell often conflicting stories
about grazing lifeways and their impacts on the environments
of these legendary mountains. The film's great strength
lies in its conveyance of a sympathetic but unromanticized
view of the plight of the Gaddi. Though some of their
herding practices have their origins in centuries past,
the obstacles they face are inscribed in the thoroughly
modern dilemmas of small-scale resource managers. Most
poignant in the film is the quandary a mobile community
faces in establishing and maintaining its claims on lands
scattered throughout the mountain regions.
The filming of this story on location in the alpine meadows
and snow-covered passes makes for breath-taking viewing.
The film-makers skillfully juxtapose the voices and faces
and working landscapes of the herders and farmers with
those of activists, social historians, and venerable Forest
Department officials. The narration is straight-forward
in its presentation and tone; neither the Gaddi nor those
who would eliminate their occupations are presented with
irony or paternalism: the story thus unfolds for the viewer
through the extensive and informed comments of numerous
actors. At the same time, the screen is not constantly
filled with "talking heads"; the steep hills form the
backdrop for many conversations, and we are treated to
glimpses of the daily activities of the men, women, and
animals for whom the hills and trails represent home.
Overall,
this film sets an excellent example for aspiring documentary
makers in the field of resource politics. It makes an
excellent teaching tool for undergraduate students in
terms of its content and the policy issues it raises.
For graduate students and activists, it provides an example
of sensitive documentation of a conflict and the power
of pictures and people's own words to convey the problems
they are facing today and in the future.
Amita
Baviskar, Assistant Professor - Department of Sociology,
Delhi School of Economics
Pastoral Politics focuses on the long standing conflict
between herders and the state and masterfully captures
the complex interplay between social groups and government
policies. This sensitive account of changing Gaddi practices
and perceptions argues eloquently in support of their
rights to the environment. This thought provoking film
is a valuable resource for stimulating discussion and
action on issues of environment & development
Ramachandra
Guha
Pastoral
Politics is a subtle and suggestive study of the Gaddi
shepherds of Himalaya. It addresses some classic dilemmas
of the contemporary world-- the community versus the state,
science versus folk knowledge, environment versus development
-- and does so with understanding and insight. An absorbing
film.