By Bharat Dogra* In 2023 the 50th anniversary of the famous Chipko Movement will be observed. This name (which translated from Hindi means hug the trees) and the movement it represents has caught popular imagination and become almost a household name in India. This refers loosely to a series of efforts, starting about 50 years back in India’s state of Uttarakhand, in West Himalayan region, in which people of these Himalayan villages were involved in protecting trees in natural forests from being axed by contractors or government agencies, as well in asserting more local rights over forests. In Uttarakhand region (then a part of Uttar Pradesh, now a state), forests play a very important role in the life and livelihood of villagers. This socio-economic reality is celebrated in culture, reflected in festivals and folk-songs. Hence it is not difficult to understand that people and communities here have a history of resisting anti-people forestry policies. In an agitation in Rawai area of