D.C. Sah

This book aims to unravel what is not apparent in the R&R process. It succeeds partly in unearthing some of the risks associated with involuntary migration but many more have still remained hidden. Based on carefully planned fieldwork for over seven years, the book reveals that though the relocation of over 4, 500 PAPs from 19 submerging villages of Gujarat to over 125 new sites had been achieved, their rehabilitation has not started yet. The involuntary migration created incompatible forces that disregarded civil society’s equity and justice norms. Not so much because of a failed policy but more because of exclusions and marginalisation originating on account of insubstantial interactions among state, civil society and the community. The success of R&R will depend on how this interface is re-established. In absence of this, it will be difficult to avoid either impoverishment risks or judicial activism.
The book will be of interest to activists, environmentalists, policy makers and students of development studies.
D.C. Sah is Professor at Madhya Pradesh Institute of Social Science Research, Ujjain. His research interests have focused mainly on economic-sociological aspects of equity and ecology in sustainable common resource management, agricultural development problems and policies, decentralised governance, and second-generation problems of development displacement. He has co-authored two books and published over thirty articles in academic journals.
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