Main content

Chipko: India’s tree-hugging women

How a grassroots environmental movement led by rural Indian women took on government-backed logging companies in the 1970s.

The 1970s were a time of rapid development in the Indian Himalayas. New roads had recently been built, allowing logging companies greater access to the region’s vast, remote forests. Local people made a subsistence livelihood from these woods, and when the trees were cut down they endured erosion, poor farming conditions and catastrophic floods. A resistance movement was formed, named Chipko – Hindi for ‘hugging’ – after its trademark protest tactic of embracing the trees. Many of its first organisers were women. Environmentalist and ecological activist, Dr Vandana Shiva was a young student when she first learnt about Chipko. She tells Viv Jones how she was inspired to volunteer for the movement. (Photo by Bhawan Singh/ The India Today Group via Getty Images)

Available now

9 minutes

Last on

Wed 4 Aug 2021 02:50GMT

Broadcasts

  • Tue 3 Aug 2021 07:50GMT
  • Tue 3 Aug 2021 11:50GMT
  • Tue 3 Aug 2021 17:50GMT
  • Wed 4 Aug 2021 02:50GMT

Podcast