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    Tigers are Our Brothers: Anthropology of Wildlife Conservation in Northeast India

    Tigers are Our Brothers by Aiyadurai, Ambika;

    Anthropology of Wildlife Conservation in Northeast India

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP India
    • Date of Publication 26 October 2021
    • Number of Volumes Hardback

    • ISBN 9780190129101
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages240 pages
    • Size 220x41x17 mm
    • Weight 318 g
    • Language English
    • 149

    Categories

    Short description:

    The Idu Mishmi people of Dibang Valley, Arunachal Pradesh, believe that tigers are their elder brothers. Killing tigers is, for the Idu Mishmi, a taboo. While their beliefs support wildlife conservation, they also offer a critique of the dominant mode of nature protection. Tigers Are Our Brothers places the Idu Mishmi experience at the centre of a global network of cultural, economic, and political tensions to contribute to our understanding of human-non-human relations.

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    Long description:

    The Idu Mishmi people of Dibang Valley, Arunachal Pradesh, believe that tigers are their elder brothers. Killing tigers is, for the Idu Mishmi, a taboo. While their beliefs support wildlife conservation, they also offer a critique of the dominant mode of nature protection. Tigers Are Our Brothers places the Idu Mishmi experience at the centre of a global network of cultural, economic, and political tensions to contribute to our understanding of human-non-human relations.
    This first-ever ethnographic study of the Idu Mishmi is well-placed to consider questions of nature and culture, set against the real-world consequences of policy decisions. It argues for an inclusive, culturally informed, and people-centric approach to wildlife conservation.

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    Table of Contents:

    List of Tables
    List of Figures
    List of Appendices
    Glossary
    Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION
    Nature, Conservation and the role of Communities
    Unpacking 'Nature'
    Nature and Wilderness
    Indigenous people and Nature
    Nature and Neoliberalism
    Nature of 'Community' participation
    Imaging Nature and the Nation
    Theme and Chapters
    Chapter 2. MY JOURNEY IN THE LAND OF RISING SUN
    Going beyond Questionnaires
    Getting There and Starting Work
    Living Among the Mishmi: Debunking Stereotypes
    Where is your team? : Stereotyping the researcher
    Challenges during Fieldwork
    Writing the 'right' things? : Expectations from Mishmi
    Producing Texts
    Chapter 3: Mishmi Social Worlds: Animals, Humans and Spirits
    Humans and Animals
    Mishmi: A brief introduction
    Wildlife Hunting
    Hunting Methods
    Hunting Rituals and Taboos
    Code Names for Animals
    Women and Wildlife Hunting
    Mithun: A Ceremonial Cattle of the Mishmi
    Mishmi's relation with Animals
    Wildlife Conservation
    Commentary
    Chapter 4 THE THIN RED LINE: Living on the Sino-Indian Border
    Mishmi: A Border Community
    Geopolitical Significance
    From the Chinese side
    The British and The Mishmi: Imagining and shaping people and territory
    'Making up People': Tribes, Scheduled Tribes and Indigenous People
    The Story of Yaaku Tacho
    The Story of a Hunter on the Border
    Biodiversity Conservation on the Border
    Hunters as 'Border Protectors'?
    Commentary
    Chapter 5 MITHUN OUT AND TAKIN IN: Shifting Ecological Identity
    Nature as an object of Identity
    Adi-Mishmi Relations
    Caring for the 'wild and rare'?
    Mithun Out and Takin In: Why?
    'Racism' in Wildlife Conservation
    Nationalizing and Federalizing Wildlife
    Gibbon replaces Mithun
    Adi-Mishmi conflict over Hunting
    Role of Urban Mishmis
    Influence of 'Hinduism'
    Commentary
    Chapter 6 - 'Amra and Apiya'': Tiger Conservation and its predicaments
    'Tigers are our Brothers'
    Tiger as a National Animal
    Dibang Tigers: Indian or Chinese?
    Different 'Avatars' of Tigers
    Friction?: When Researchers met Mishmi
    Mediating Voices
    Commentary
    Chapter 7 - Conclusion
    'Sociological Emptiness'
    Does tiger being a 'brother' help the tiger?

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