DFG Food Security in Ladakh

subsistence-oriented resource utilisation and socioeconomic transformation

Subsistence-oriented land use on small-scale, irrigated plots

Due to rapid changes of political and socio-economic structures as well as ecological conditions, rural food and livelihood security are facing new challenges. Besides shifting settings on the village level, regional, national, and international processes have an increasing impact on actions and strategies of local actors. High mountain regions, which are generally characterised by a peripheral location, limited resource potential, and political marginalisation, are especially exposed to these dynamics. The region of Ladakh, Northern India, proves as a suitable case study to investigate the effects of such dynamic conditions on food security in high altitude areas. Separated from the Indian subcontinent by the Great Himalayan Range and edged by the Karakoram Range to the North, Ladakh is characterised by a rugged topography at an average altitude of over 3,000 m and the seasonal closure of road passes. Due to arid climatic conditions, human settlements and agricultural land-use are found in irrigated oases along the watercourses. Although subsistence-oriented production remains the economic mainstay, livelihood strategies have diversified in the light of growing geostrategic relevance and significant socio-economic changes. In recent years, non-agrarian income sources (e.g. in the tourism sector), trade of food and foodstuffs, as well as governmental and non-governmental programs have gained importance. The objective of the research project is the analysis of the effects of changing structural conditions on different components of the local food system, encompassing food availability, access to food, and food utilisation. In this context, questions of adaptation, new potentials and dependencies are central. We follow a multi-methodological approach, applying qualitative and quantitative research methods. The empirical data are combined with GIS and remote sensing techniques for the analysis of spatial, temporal, and functional interdependencies.

Project Team
Prof. Dr. Marcus Nüsser 
Dipl. Geogr. Juliane Dame 

Duration: 2008-2011
Funding: German Research Foundation (DFG)
Project number: NU102 / 7-1 and 7-2

Publications

DAME J (2018): Food Security and Translocal Livelihoods in High Mountains: Evidence from Ladakh, India. Mountain Research and Development  38: 310–322. https://doi.org/10.1659/mrd-journal-d-18-00026.1

DAME J (2015): Ernährungssicherung im Hochgebirge: Akteure und ihr Handeln im Kontext des sozioökonomischen Wandels in Ladakh, Indien. Franz Steiner: Stuttgart

DAME J (2012): Zwischen Subsistenz und Subventionen: Ernährungs- und Lebenssicherung in Ladakh. Geographische Rundschau 64 (4): 34-41.

NÜSSER M, SCHMIDT S & DAME J (2012): Irrigation and Development in the Upper Indus Basin: Characteristics and Recent Changes of a Socio-Hydrological System in Central Ladakh, India. Mountain Research and Development 32 (1): 51-61.

DAME J & NÜSSER M (2011): Food security in high mountain regions: agricultural production and the impact of food subsidies in Ladakh, Northern India. Food Security 3 (2): 179-194.

DAME J, MANKELOW JS (2010): Stongde revisited: land-use change in Central Zangskar. Erdkunde 64:355–370. https://doi.org/10.3112/erdkunde.2010.04.05

DAME J (2010): Auf dem Dach der Welt. Landnutzung und Ernährungssicherung im Himalaya. Praxis Geographie  10/2010: 12-17 & Transparency.

DAME J (2009): Barley and potato chips: New actors in the agricultural production of Ladakh. Ladakh Studies 24 (June 2009): 15-24.

DAME J & NÜSSER M (2008): Development Paths and Perspectives in Ladakh, India. Geographische Rundschau - International Edition 4 (4): 20-27 & map.

Award

Dr. Juliane Dame received the “Wilhelm Lauer Preis” in 2013 for her PhD thesis on food-security in the Trans-Himalayan region of Ladakh.