Social Inequality and Environmental Threats in Indus Delta Villages: Pakistan

Type Working Paper
Title Social Inequality and Environmental Threats in Indus Delta Villages: Pakistan
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
URL http://www.filmsdart.com/researchcollective.org/Documents/WP_118.pdf
Abstract
The physical presence of historic villages and habitats on the Indus Delta is observed to be
under threat due to environmental changes and permanent disasters. The delta of River Indus
has distinct social, economical and environmental features as compared to the rest of
the coast of Pakistan. The delta population, being the lower riparian of the River Indus, receives
a limited flow of fresh water. This is causing environmental degradation and negatively
impacting traditional livelihoods, survival and resilience patterns in the presence of high
levels of social inequality. Climate and environmental changes over time are deemed as a
root cause of the rise of sea level which is leading to a loss of land, rendering it unusable for
cultivation, increase in salinity, depletion of mangrove forests and a decline in fish catch. This
paper is an outcome of field visits to the Indus delta’s inland and the island villages in Kharo
Chan in particular. In this paper, the focus is on environmentally induced migration caused by
slow-onset disasters and its linkages with social inequality based on class, caste and kinship
groups.

Related studies

»