Environmental history in India has  generated a rich literature on forests, wildlife, human–animal conflict, tribal  rights and commercial degradation, displacement and development, pastoralism  and desertification, famine and disease, sedentarism and mobility, wildness and  civility, and the ecology versus equity debate. 
  This reader brings together some of the  best and most interesting writing on India’s ecological pasts. It looks at a  variety of the country’s regions, landscapes, and arenas as settings for strife  or harmony, as topography and ecological fabric, in the process covering a vast  historical terrain. 
  Vol 1. provides an antidote to the  existing historiography, which barely takes notice of the era before 1800. The  essays here range from prehistoric India to the middle of the nineteenth  century. They provide insights on forest and water disputes, contests over  urban and rural space, struggles over water and land, and frictions over  natural wealth which have led to a reinterpretation of source materials on  early and medieval India.
  Vol 2. Shows how colonial rule resulted  in ecological change on a new scale altogether. Forests covering over half a  million sq km were taken over by 1904 and managed by foresters.  Canal construction on a gigantic scale  gave British India perhaps more acreage than any other political entity on  earth. Similar new forces were at work in relation to the animal  world, with species being reclassified as vermin to be hunted down or as game  to be selectively shot.
  For all who are interested in the  diverse and detailed findings of the best scholarship on India’s environment,  this book (and its companion volume) is essential.