Abstract:
Environmental problems begin locally. The farmer who uses slash and burn agriculture to
solve his hunger problem does not know or care that he is one of 1,000,000 who is
destroying the nation’s forests and making a significant contribution to global warming.
The latrines constructed too close to the river, the cows left to bathe there, the factory
which turns its pipe for waste water carelessly toward the river to make production easier
and cheaper: this is how a nation’s water resources are destroyed.
As the problem is fundamentally local, the solution is always local too. National leaders
have spent too much time at global summits where little could be accomplished without
taking the boring, painstaking steps at local levels. This study documents the fact that
“Think global, act local” is a vital principle of environmental governance. Global action
can never be more than the sum of millions of local actions and each can go for or against
a healthy environment.
This study finds that the local governments which should be in the vanguard of
environmental protection, saving ponds, disposing of or recycling solid waste, preventing
building and other infrastructural development from damaging the environment, are not in
fact even carrying their weapons. The laws are there and they are good: but in practice
they are virtually ignored. So, nothing gets done.
So this study focuses on the local governments. We have selected Rajshahi as a typical
Divisional city and Rajshahi City Corporation as a typical urban centre in Bangladesh, to
see what local governments could do, can do and are doing. Through key informant
interviews, questionnaires of stakeholders and review of documents, we have found what
is happening in practice in this City Corporation.
From this case study, we can infer what is happening in the other Divisional cities. The
conclusion is that there is a large gap between written policy/law and implementation.
Other researchers should confirm that this is not just a problem of Rajshahi. Then we
have recommended that the central government should do something: make penalties
serious; mandate community involvement; provide resources; consolidate overlapping
local jurisdictions and establish one agency in each City Corporation to monitor and act
on the environmental health of the city, with sufficient professional staff, prosecutorial
power and financial backing to get the job done.
Description:
This thesis is Submitted to the Institute of Bangladesh Studies (IBS), University of Rajshahi, Rajshahi, Bangladesh for The Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)