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This book describes participatory Role of Indigenous Women in Environmental Conservation in the Himalayan Region offers a comprehensive exploration of how Indigenous women leverage their Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) to safeguard fragile ecosystems, uphold cultural heritage, and enhance community resilience. Scientific studies increasingly affirm that women's participation in natural resource management leads to more adaptive, equitable, and sustainable conservation outcomes, with biodiversity flourishing when decision-making processes incorporate their perspectives. This volume spans fifteen chapters and highlights the intersection of gender, environmental stewardship, and policy frameworks. It critically examines how land rights and legal structures empower or restrict women's involvement in conservation efforts. The research underscores that gender-sensitive policy reforms address inequalities and contribute to more effective water conservation, sustainable agriculture, and forest management. Women s leadership in seed preservation, organic farming, and rainwater harvesting has been shown to stabilize food systems and mitigate climate volatility, reinforcing community-driven resilience strategies. The book also underscores how cultural preservation is deeply intertwined with ecological stewardship. Indigenous practices such as storytelling, herbal medicine, and sustainable textile production serve as living archives of ecological wisdom, passing vital conservation knowledge across generations. Recognizing and integrating these traditions into broader conservation initiatives ensures cultural continuity and environmental sustainability. Additionally, the resurgence of customary laws and Indigenous governance structures highlights women s pivotal role in maintaining community norms prioritizing biodiversity and ecosystem balance. The challenges of modernization, globalization, and tourism are also critically examined. While these forces often disrupt traditional customs and resource management practices, Himalayan women have demonstrated remarkable adaptability. The book showcases community-based enterprises--such as ecotourism cooperatives and sustainable handicraft industries where women strategically integrate modern technology with TEK, generating economic opportunities while minimizing environmental degradation. Further, the book evaluates international policy frameworks, advocating for more substantial institutional support and multi-stakeholder collaborations. Evidence suggests that education and gender-inclusive curricula are crucial in cultivating a new generation of environmental leaders. This volume also provides practical insights into climate adaptation strategies, spotlighting women-led initiatives that drive transformative ecological stewardship. This book illuminates a path toward sustainable, inclusive, and community-centered environmental conservation in the Himalayan region by bridging scientific and Indigenous knowledge systems.
Centering Indigenous Women in Himalayan Environmental Conservation.- Historical Perspectives: Women s Traditional Stewardship and Ecological Wisdom.- Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) and Gender Dynamics.- Land Rights, Gender Inequality, and Barriers to Participation.- Empowering Tribal Women as Key Agents of Environmental Conservation in the Himalayan Region.- Sustainable Agricultural Practices: Women s Innovations in Himalayan Farming.- Women s Role in Water Conservation and Management in the Himalayas.- Women and Community Resilience to Climate Change.- Resurgence of Indigenous Environmental Governance through Women s Participation.- External Pressures: Modernization, Globalization, and Cultural Shifts.- Indigenous Women and the Conservation of Sacred Natural Sites.- Community-Based Enterprises and Environmental Sustainability.- Role of women in protecting forests from deforestation and overexploitation.- Climate Change Adaptation: Building Resilient Communities.- Role of Indigenous women in sustainable innovation and ecological conservation in Himalayan Region: Legal and Policy Perspectives.
Ms. Nilakshi Moran is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Satyawati College (Evening), University of Delhi. Her research lies at the intersection of ecocriticism, environmental humanities, and postcolonial literary studies. She examines ecological imaginaries in literature, with particular attention to the conceptual framework of the Plantationocene in North-East India, contributing to contemporary debates in postcolonial environmental discourse. In addition to environmental literary criticism, she is engaged in collaborative international research on Indian languages, with an emerging focus on historical linguistics and language ecologies. Her work has appeared in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes, including Postcolonial Negotiations through Select Poems of North-East India in New Literaria (2019) and Negotiating Displaced Identities and Trauma in the Novels of Michael Ondaatje in Migration, Diaspora and Nation Building (2020). She has also contributed to translation projects linked to major cinematic works, reflecting her interdisciplinary interest in language, culture, and media.
Dr. Pardeep Singh is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at PGDAV College, University of Delhi, New Delhi, India. He holds a PhD in Environmental Chemistry from the Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi. His academic and research work spans environmental science, sustainability, pollution remediation, waste management, natural resource conservation, and climate change, with growing emphasis on the ecological and developmental challenges of the Indian Himalayan Region. His work engages with themes such as mountain environments, climate vulnerability, environmental sustainability, and the role of local and traditional knowledge in building resilience and supporting conservation in Himalayan communities. Dr. Singh has an extensive publication and editorial record. According to the uploaded CV, he has edited more than 60 books and has published more than 100 scholarly contributions, including research papers, review articles, and book chapters. He has also contributed to major academic discussions on sustainability, climate change, and mountain environments, including work related to the Anthropocene and the Indian Himalayas. With substantial editorial experience and an interdisciplinary research profile, he brings valuable insight to scholarship on the participatory role of women in environmental conservation and community-centred sustainability.
Dr. Kshitij Kumar Singh is an Associate Professor at Campus Law Centre, Faculty of Law, University of Delhi. He earned his LL.M. and PhD degrees from Banaras Hindu University and received Canadian Commonwealth Scholarship Asia-Pacific 2010. He is Research Affiliate to Inter-CeBIL Programme at University of Copenhagen, Denmark and a collaborator to Genetic Discrimination Observatory (GDO), Centre of Genetics and Policy, McGill University, Canada. His primary area of interest is IP law and biotechnology law, particularly ethical, legal and policy issues relating to biomedical technology, sustainable innovation, AMR and precision medicine.
He published extensively with esteemed publishers including Oxford, Edward Elgar, Cambridge, Elsevier and Springer Nature on patenting of agricultural biotechnology and biomedical technology in the light of open and collaborative approaches. He emphasizes a pragmatic approach to law that addresses the concerns of various stakeholders in the biotechnology domain through inclusion and participation. His current interest is equity and diversity in science (research pertaining to human genetics and genomics).



