Context:
- Across India and South Asia, women are at the forefront of environmental justice movements, resisting displacement, extractive industries, and ecological destruction.
- Despite their active role, women remain largely excluded from formal decision-making, land ownership, and consultation processes.
- The issue intersects GS Paper 1 (Indian Society – Gender), GS Paper 2 (Governance & Rights), and GS Paper 3 (Environment & Ecology), highlighting the structural invisibility of women in environmental governance.
Key Highlights:
Women and Environmental Justice Movements
- Women from Tamil Nadu’s coastal regions, Odisha’s forest belts, and Jharkhand’s mining zones lead protests against:
- Mining projects
- Industrial pollution
- Large infrastructure and extractive activities
- Despite being primary stakeholders, their participation is often symbolic or completely ignored during formal consultations.
Legal Frameworks and Implementation Gaps
- Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006:
- Recognises individual and community forest rights, including women’s rights.
- In practice, land titles are frequently issued only in men’s names.
- PESA Act, 1996:
- Mandates Gram Sabha consent in Scheduled Areas.
- Women’s voices within Gram Sabhas are often marginalised due to patriarchal norms.
- Customary Laws:
- Continue to dominate land ownership patterns, reinforcing male inheritance and exclusion of women.
FPIC and Gender Exclusion
- Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) mechanisms exist on paper.
- In reality:
- Consultations are conducted with male representatives.
- Women’s consent is neither individually sought nor recorded.
- Widows, single women, and women-headed households are systematically excluded.
Gendered Impacts of Displacement and Climate Change
- Environmental degradation and climate stress disproportionately affect women’s access to:
- Forests (fuelwood, NTFPs)
- Water resources
- Livelihoods and food security
- Displacement worsens unpaid care burdens and economic vulnerability.
Regional Comparisons (South Asia)
- Bangladesh and Nepal show similar patterns:
- Progressive laws on co-ownership and land rights exist.
- Implementation remains weak due to patriarchal administrative practices.
Scientific / Conceptual Dimensions:
- FPIC (Free, Prior and Informed Consent):
- International legal principle ensuring communities can accept or reject projects affecting their land and livelihoods.
- Climate Adaptation Frameworks:
- Often gender-neutral on paper, but gender-blind in practice.
- Fail to integrate women’s traditional ecological knowledge, reducing effectiveness.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Issue: Invisibility of women in land, environment, and climate governance.
- Causes:
- Patriarchal land ownership norms
- Male-dominated customary laws
- Weak implementation of gender-sensitive legislation
- Government Provisions:
- Forest Rights Act, 2006
- PESA Act, 1996
- Constitutional backing to Gram Sabhas in Scheduled Areas
- Impacts:
- Exclusion from compensation and rehabilitation
- Increased vulnerability to climate and livelihood shocks
- Challenges:
- Tokenistic participation
- Absence of gender-disaggregated data
- Poor accountability in consent processes
Relevant Mains Points:
- Conceptual Clarity:
- Gender Justice: Equality in access to resources, decision-making, and rights.
- Climate Justice: Recognises differentiated impacts of climate change on vulnerable groups.
- Governance Gaps:
- Disconnect between progressive laws and ground-level implementation.
- Institutional neglect of women as rights-holders, not beneficiaries.
- Significance:
- Policies lacking women’s participation suffer from legitimacy and effectiveness deficits.
- Women are not merely victims but leaders, protectors, and knowledge holders.
- Way Forward:
- Mandatory joint land titles and gender audits under FRA and PESA.
- Institutionalising women-only consultations within FPIC processes.
- Capacity-building of women in Gram Sabhas and local governance.
- Integrating gender-sensitive climate adaptation planning.
Recognising women’s traditional ecological knowledge in policy design.
