Mountain Livelihoods in Transition

This dissertation research, funded by a Fulbright award, investigated the transformation of the tribal District of Kinnaur in the Indian Himalaya. Dr. Rahimzadeh examined Kinnauri adaptation to political, economic, environmental, and social events of the last seven decades, including state intervention, market integration, and climate change. Her ethnographic research found that Kinnaur’s transformation and current economic prosperity have been chiefly induced by outside forces, creating a temporary landscape of opportunity. State-led interventions including land reform and a push to supplement subsistence agriculture with commercial horticulture initiated a significant agrarian transition beginning with India’s Independence.

Analyzing climate change and its consequences on Kinnaur, Dr. Rahimzadeh’s research makes a valuable contribution to the field by showing how climate change may provide a temporary landscape of opportunity for once-marginalized peoples. Her research illustrated how climate change is shifting land use practices and changing patterns of agricultural production. Formerly non-arable land in the high-altitude zone is being placed under apple production and contributing to growing prosperity, albeit temporary. Kinnauri livelihood diversity has decreased with growing dependence on one dominant cash crop, resulting in vulnerability to fluctuating markets and weather conditions.

Livelihood diversification may provide important long-term protection for Kinnauri prosperity.

Her research further examined the historical implications of different land reform programs and their repercussion on land allocation to landless Kinnauris. Her findings suggested that despite the initial inequitable distribution of land, landless Kinnauris predominantly became landowners. She also illustrated how other socio-economic measures, including the construction of a strategic national highway, access to wage labor, provision of government jobs and government promotion of commercial apple production, all converged to change the socio-economic dynamics of Kinnaur leading to a currently prosperous region. 

Research findings from this work resulted in two publications in peer reviewed journals:

Rahimzadeh, A. (2017). Political ecology of climate change: Shifting orchards and a temporary landscape of opportunity. World Development Perspectives, 6, 25-31.

Rahimzadeh, A. (2018). Political ecology of land reforms in Kinnaur: Implications and a historical overview. Land Use Policy, 70, 570-579.  

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