New Books Network

Arpitha Kodiveri, "Governing Forests: State, Law and Citizenship in India’s Forests" (Melbourne UP, 2024)

Nov 22, 2025
Arpitha Kodiveri, an environmental law and justice scholar at Vassar College, dives into her book on the complex dynamics of forest governance in India. She discusses the historical tensions between the state and forest-dwelling communities, highlighting the innovative strategies these communities use to secure their rights amid environmental challenges. Kodiveri introduces her concept of 'negotiated sovereignty,' advocating for a more collaborative approach to conservation that heals historical divides. Her insights reveal how legal frameworks can both empower and constrain Indigenous stewardship.
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INSIGHT

Embrace Tension Over Quick Legal Fixes

  • Arpita Kodiveri learned to hold legal tensions rather than force resolution when working as an environmental lawyer in Sariska Tiger Reserve.
  • She used scholarly writing as refuge to narrate contested community decisions without rushing to legal fixes.
INSIGHT

Law's Limits Revealed By Anthropology

  • Kodiveri critiques law as insular, hierarchical, and methodologically confused compared with anthropology.
  • She left legal practice, embraced anthropology, then returned to law with a healthier skepticism and new methods.
INSIGHT

Colonial Law Recast Rights As Privileges

  • The Indian Forest Act converted customary rights into discretionary privileges to enable colonial extractive governance.
  • Colonial law managed Adivasi sovereignty by selectively applying or excluding legal regimes in 'excluded' areas.
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