Social Science Baha invites you to its Lecture Series - TopicsExpress



          

Social Science Baha invites you to its Lecture Series LXXVI Thomas Robertson on Developing International Development: DDT and U.S. Environmental and Social Engineering in the Chitwan Valley of Nepal, 1952-1965 5.30 pm • 20 May, 2014 (Tuesday) • Yalamaya Kendra, Patan Dhoka, Lalitpur For most outsiders, Nepal evokes the soaring peaks of the Himalayas, not the scourge of malaria. But much of Nepal’s history has been profoundly shaped by malaria. For centuries, malaria plagued most lands up to 4,000 feet, including mountain valleys and the Terai, and contributed to the country’s isolation. All this changed during the 1950s and 1960s with the use of DDT through a joint U.S.-WHO-Nepali government program. Although falling short of its goal of total eradication, the program dramatically transformed the country. This lecture will examine the first of these projects in the Chitwan District. Until the 1950s, the Chitwan Valley was, like all of Nepal, closed off to the outside world because of politics and malaria. By 1975, just two decades after the program’s inception, Chitwan had become Nepal’s breadbasket and the site of its first national park. Based on archival documents and oral histories from the U.S. and Nepal, this presentation will examine the geopolitical, environmental, and economic consequences of this vast technology-based program. I will tease out the American and international ideas of nature, disease, technology, and development that informed the programs. I will also examine the experiences of variously situated Nepal actors—government planners and engineers, migrants from the hills, and the Tharu, the indigenous group who had long called the Chitwan valley home. * * * Thomas Robertson is an associate professor at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. He first came to Nepal in 1988 with the School for International Training and later served in the U.S. Peace Corps in Khotang District from 1992 to 1995. He received his Ph.D. in history from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2005. Professor Robertson is author of The Malthusian Moment: Global Population Growth and the Birth of American Environmentalism (Rutgers University Press, 2012), which examines American ideas about population growth from World War I to the Reagan Administration. His new research uses archival and ethnographic data to examine the environmental history of US development projects in Nepal during the Cold War. This is a public event and admission is free and open to all. Seating is first-come-first-served. Please direct queries to 4472807.
Posted on: Sun, 18 May 2014 07:49:43 +0000

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