Gender and Green Governance
The Political Economy of Women's Presence Within and Beyond Community Forestry
Bina Agarwal
Reviews and Awards
"Path-breaking...a landmark contribution...[Agarwal] fills, as she also argues, two critical gaps in womens economic empowerment, one relating to command over private property and the other relating to command over public resources and institutions. ...an immense contribution not only to ecological economics but also to political science, rural sociology, and energy studies."--Economic & Political Weekly (India)
"An exceptional outcome of the interdisciplinary work undertaken by the author. It cuts across a number of areas which are of growing policy relevance, such as inclusion of women, sustainability of natural forests, local institutions, rural energy, etc. The language of the book is simple and the facts are easy to understand even for a general reader. The author has been distinctively able to maintain the smooth flow of the book. ...the book will be of enormous reference for a range of users including policy-makers, researchers in the fields of environment, political economy, energy, social sciences, etc., as well as civil society groups and students."--South Asia Economic Journal
"Bina Agarwal's study combines a theoretical review with detailed qualitative and quantitative data from 135 community forestry institutions (CFIs), so that regression analyses of relationships are supported with quotes providing the voices of women themselves who are involved in forest management. The result is a nuanced analysis that demonstrates the value of mixed-methods approaches. It is an important book for those interested in forestry or South Asia as well as their gender dimensions, but also has considerably broader lessons." --Feminist Economics
"The grounded and realistic perspective of Bina Agarwal's Gender and Green Governance is so important to contemporary debates. Specifically, it looks at community forestry, its institutions and governance in the context of gender.The author's voice compels us to distrust truisms, thrust aside mindsets and ultimately, to see that equity and truth do not lie in numbers or theories. They are embedded in reality. Cutting across areas of economics, environmental studies, political economy, gender studies, local green governance and public policy, this book needs to be read by all--academicians, environmentalists, economists, government officials, rural workers, NGO-workers, policy makers-- this is a book for the people." --Indian Journal of Gender Studies
"Few authors write a landmark academic text. Smaller still is the list of scholars who have written two such texts, which is what Bina Agarwal has now done. It is a rigorous, engaged and deeply serious exploration of the conditions under which the greater involvement of women in forest management committees improves the quality of environmental (or green) governance. Agarwal's wonderful book should not be the last word on Gender and Green Governance, but must act as a spur to further and more effective work that will seek to build upon and challenge her key public policy findings. Gender and Green Governance will rightly be acknowledged as a classic not just in environmental studies, but in studies of development, governance, public action and public service delivery more broadly." --Journal of Development Studies
"Gender and Green Governance is a magisterial work of astounding erudition. While resplendent with field interviews and statistical tables, its ultimate significance is as a thought-provoking examination of political institutions--what makes them legitimate, efficient, inclusive, representative and stable over time."--Studies in Indian Politics