Q1: How can we protect the rights of the indigenous people with regard to the environment?
Ans: We can protect the rights of the indigenous people with regard to the environment by resisting globalization. Many of the movements against globalization have focussed on the right of indigenous people.
Q2: List any four areas or regions which come under ‘Global commons’.
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Q3: Which World Summit Conference held in Rio in 1992?
Ans: In June 1992, the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development was held in Rio- de-Janeiro.
Q4: Suggest any two steps to be taken by the government to check pollution and save the environment.
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Q5: Who are considered as ‘indigenous people’ in India?
Ans: In India, scheduled tribes are considered Indigenous people.
Q6: What aroused a sense of common concern among the indigenous communities of the world during the 1970s?
Ans: Capitalists and M.N.C are draining their natural resources by illegal means and sometimes people are also compelled for immigrating from their native places.
Q7: Highlight the major objective of UNFCCC.
Ans: Protection of climate system on the basis of equality and in accordance with their common but differentiated.
Q8: What is meant by the protection of ‘Global Commons’ in the world?
Ans: Global Commons include the earth’s atmosphere. Global Common should be utilized in a limited way. To protect Global Commons it is essential that awareness should be created in the public about Global Commons.
Q9: What does the UNEP stand for?
Ans: UNEP stands for the United Nations Environment Programme to hold international conferences to promote coordination to an effective response to environmental problems.
Q10: What is Agenda 21?
Ans: Agenda 21 is a list of developed practices ecological responsibility to promote sustainable development.
Q11: What do you mean by Global Commons?
Ans: Global Commons is the common governance by the international community over the areas or regions which are located outside the sovereign jurisdiction of any one state or authority.
Q12: What is UNFCCC?
Ans: The 1992 United Nations Framework Convention Climate Change (UNFCCC) provides that the parties should act to protect the climate system on the basis of equity and in accordance with the common but differentiated responsibilities.
Q13: Suggest any two steps to be taken by the government to check pollution and save the environment.
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Q14: Mention any two outcomes of Rio- Summit.
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Q15: Give any two environmental concerns of global politics.
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Q16: Explain the most obvious threat to the survival of indigenous people.
Ans: The most obvious threat to the survival of indigenous people is the loss of land which
was occupied by their ancestral. The loss of land referred to a loss of their economic resource also.
Q17: How did Earth Summit draw the attention of global politics towards environmental issues?
Ans: The Earth Summit drew attention of global politics towards environmental issues because it produced conventions to deal with climate change, biodiversity, forestry and recommended a list of development practices called Agenda 21 which combined economic growth with ecological responsibility is known as ‘Sustainable Development’ as well as Earth Summit laid stress on the cooperation of states to conserve, protect, restore the health and integrity of the earth’s ecosystems.
Q18: Mention the major problems of ecological issues.
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Q19: What is the Kyoto Protocol?
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Q20: What do you mean by common property?
Ans: Common property refers to the rights and duties of a group together over a natural resource with the following norms:
Q21: What is ‘Resource Geopolitics’?
Ans: ‘Resource Geopolitics’ is concerned with the allocation of distribution of natural resources among the nation states of the global arena:
Q22: Is there any difference between the perspective adopted by the rich and the poor nations to protect the Earth? Explain.
Ans: Yes, the rich and the poor nations adopted different prospectives to protect the earth at Rio-Summit:
Q23: What is the significance of the Kyoto Protocol? Is India a signatory to this protocol?
Ans: Kyoto Protocol is an international agreement setting targets for industrialized countries to cut their greenhouse gas emissions. The protocol was agreed to in 1997 in Kyoto, Japan-based on principles set by United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. India, China, and other developing countries were exempted from the requirements of the Kyoto Protocol because, in developing countries, per capita emissions are very low. However, India signed Kyoto Protocol in August 2002.
Q24: Explain ‘Agenda 21’ and ‘sustainable development’ as discussed at the Rio Summit.
Ans:
Q25: Explain India’s position on the environmental issues facing the contemporary world.
Ans: India signed and ratified the 1997 Kyoto Protocol in August 2002. At the G-8 meeting in June 2005, India pointed out that the per capita emission rates of the developing countries are a tiny fraction of those in the developed world. India is of the view that the major responsibility of curbing emission depends upon the developed countries, which have accumulated emission for a long period of time. India’s international negotiating position depends on the principles of historical responsibility, as enshrined in UNFCCC. The Indian government is already participating in global efforts through a number of programs. The Electricity Act of 2003 encourages the use of renewable energy.
Q26: Explain any four steps taken by the Government of India to curb the emission of greenhouse gases.
Ans:
Q27: Who are indigenous people? Describe any four problems of the indigenous people.
Ans: The United Nations defines an indigenous population as comprising the descendants of people who inhabited the present territory of a country at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic-origin arrived there from other parts of the world and overcame them. Indigenous people today live more in conformity with their particular social, economic, and cultural customs and traditions than the institutions of the country of which they now are its part.
Problems of Indigenous Peoples: Following are the problems of Indigenous peoples.
Q28: What is meant by common property resources? Explain with examples.
Ans: Common property refers to the rights and duties of a group together over natural resources with the following norms:
Q29: Explain the meaning of global commons. Give any four examples of global commons.
Ans: The areas of regions located outside the jurisdiction of any one state and require common governance by the international community are Global Commons i.e. Earth atmosphere. Antarctic Ocean Floor and outer space. They are exploited and polluted due to:
Q30: Describe any four steps taken by India to improve the environment.
Ans: The Indian government is participating in global efforts through a number of programmes:
Q31: Define the indigenous population. Highlight any two problems of such people.
Ans: The UN defines indigenous population as comprising the descendants of people who inhabited the present territory of a country at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic origin arrived there from other parts of the world and overcame them. The following problems are faced by such people:
Q32: Explain the importance and role of concept common but differentiated pertaining to the environment.
Ans: Compromise and accommodation are the two essential policies to Save Planet Earth by the states but the states from North and South have different notions towards environmental issues:
All the above-mentioned provisions were accepted in Earth Summit, 1992 while adopting common but differentiated responsibilities.
Q33: Explain India’s stand on environmental issues. What steps have been suggested by India in this respect?
Ans: India plays a dominating role among the Asian countries on environmental issues:
Q34: What is meant by the environment? Suggest any two steps for environmental improvement.
Ans: Environment refers to surroundings of a region which can be improved by taking the following steps:
Q35: What do you mean by environmental movements? Explain.
Ans: Environmental movements are the movements of a group which are environmentally conscious to challenge environmental degradation to work at both the national and international levels or local levels:
Categories of Environmental Movements:
Q36: Oil is an important resource in global strategy that affects the geopolitics and global economy. Comment.
Ans: Oil is the resource which generates immense wealth, hence it creates political struggles involving industrialized countries to adopt various methods to ensure steady flows of oil:
Q37: Water is a crucial resource for global politics. Explain with examples.
Or
Explain the water wars with examples.
Ans: Water is a crucial resource relevant to global politics. Regional variations and increasing scarcity of fresh water in some parts of the world point to the possibility of disagreements over shared water resources as a leading source of conflicts in the 21st century, which is known as water wars:
Q38: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions:
The Indian government is already participating in global efforts through a number of programmes. For example, India’s National Autofuel Policy mandates cleaner fuels for vehicles. The Energy Conservation Act, passed in 2001, outlines initiatives to improve energy efficiency. Similarly, the Electricity Act of 2003 encourages the use of renewable energy. Recent trends in importing natural gas and encouraging the adoption of clean coal technologies show that India has been making real efforts. The government is also keen to launch a National Mission on Biodiesel, using about 11 million hectares of land to produce biodiesel by 2011-2012. And India has one of the largest renewable energy programmes in the world.
1. How India has participated in global efforts to protect the environment?
2. What are the Energy Conservation Act and the Electricity Act?
3. Mention the efforts made by the Indian government for biodiesel.
Ans:
1. It has launched a number of programmes i.e. Auto Fuel Policy, Energy Conservation Act 2001, the Electricity Act 2003 to protect the environment.
2. The Energy Conservation Act was passed in 2001 to outline initiatives to improve energy efficiency and Electricity Act, passed in 2003 to encourage the use of renewable energy by the Indian government as a conservation programme.
3. The Indian government is keen to launch a National Mission on Biodiesel using about 11 million hectares of land to produce biodiesel by 2011-12.
Q39: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions:
The global economy relied on oil for much of the 20th century as a portable and indispensable fuel. The immense wealth associated with oil generates political struggles to control it, and the history of petroleum is also the history of war and struggle. Nowhere is this more obviously the case than in West Asia and Central Asia, West Asia, specifically the Gulf region, accounts for about 30 percent of global oil production. But it has about 64 percent of the planet’s known reserves and is, therefore, the only region able to satisfy any substantial rise in oil demand. Saudi Arabia has a quarter of the world’s total reserves and is the single largest producer. Iraq’s known reserves are second only to Saudi Arabia’s. And, since substantial portions of Iraqi territory are yet to be fully explored, there is a fair chance that actual resei*ves might be far that actual receives might be far larger. The United States, Europe, Japan, and increasingly India and China, which consume this petroleum, are located at a considerable distance from the region.
1. Which region has much potential for oil production?
2. Which area is supposed to have far larger reserves than actually, it has?
3. Why the history of petroleum is called the history of war and struggle?
Ans:
1. West Asia especially the Gulf region enjoys much more potential for oil production larger. The United States, Europe, Japan, and increasingly India and China, which consume this petroleum, are located at a considerable distance from the region.
2. Iraqi territory is supposed to be fully explored.
3. The global economy relied on oil for much of 20th century as a portable and indispensable fuel. The commonwealth associated with oil generates political struggles to control it.
Q40: Explain the meaning of ’Global Commons’. How are environmental concerns becoming important in global politics?
Ans: Meaning of Global Commons:
The issues related to global environmental protection have become the priority concern of states since 1990 due to the following reasons:
Q41: Analyze India’s stand on any three environmental issues.
Ans:
Q42: Define the ‘Indigenous People’ and highlight any two threats to their survival.
Ans: Indigenous people are the descendants of the native dwellers who have been living in a particular territory before the people of different cultures or ethnic origins arrived from other parts to capture that particular territory. The United Nations defines an indigenous population as comprising the descendants of people who inhabited the present territory of a country at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic origin arrived there from other parts of the world and overcame them. Indigenous people are illiterate and poor. They do not know how to protect their rights. The land is only the source of their income. Thus, the loss of land also means the loss of an economic resource base.
Following are the two threats to the survival of indigenous people:
Q43: Explain the meaning of global commons’. How are environmental concerns becoming important in global politics?
Ans: ‘Commons’ are those resources which are not owned by anyone but rather shared by a community. This could be a ‘common room’, a ‘community center’, a park or a river. Similarly, there are some areas or regions of the world which are located outside the sovereign jurisdiction of any one state, and therefore require common governance by the international community. These are known as ‘global commons’. They include the earth’s atmosphere, Antarctica, the ocean floor and outer space.
Although environmental concerns have a long history, awareness of the environmental consequences of economic growth acquired an increasingly political character from the 1960s onwards. The Club of Rome, a global think-tank, published a book in 1972 entitled Limits to Growth, dramatizing the potential depletion of the earth’s resources against the backdrop of the rapidly growing world population. International agencies began holding international conferences and promoting detailed studies to get a more coordinated and effective response to environmental problems. Since then, the environment has emerged as significant. an issue of global politics.
The growing focus on environmental issues within the arena of global politics was firmly consolidated at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992.
This was also called the Earth Summit. The Summit was attended by 170 states, thousands of NGOs and many multinational corporations. The Summit produced conventions dealing with climate change, biodiversity, forestry and recommended a list of development practices called ‘Agenda 21’. But it left unresolved considerable differences and difficulties. There was a consensus on combining economic growth with ecological responsibility. This approach to development is commonly known as ‘sustainable development’.
Q44: Explain the concept of “common but differentiated responsibilities”. How and where was it emphasized upon?
Or
States have common but differentiated responsibilities towards the environment. Analyze the statement giving suitable examples.
Ans: Common but differentiated responsibilities mean that ‘the states shall cooperate in the spirit of global partnership to conserve, protect and restore the health and integrity of the earth’s ecosystem. As the states have common but differentiated responsibilities over the various contribution of global environmental degradation. The developed countries acknowledge that the responsibility that they bear in the international pursuit of sustainable development in view of the pressures their societies place on the global environment and of the technological and financial resources they command. We could implement the idea with the help of conventions and declarations:
Q45: Analyze India’s stand on any three environmental issues. Or
Analyze India’s stand on environmental issues.
Ans: India plays a dominating role among the Asian countries on environmental issues:
Q46: Explain any three environmental concerns in global politics.
Ans: Some environmental issues have been considered as global issues:
Q47: Mention the rights of indigenous peoples.
Ans: The UN defines indigenous population as the descendants of people who inhabited the present territory of a country’at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic origin arrived there from other parts of the world and overcome them. The rights of indigenous people can be summarised as follows:
Q48: Study the picture given below and answer the questions that follow:
1. What does the picture represent?
2. Why do you think the fingers are designed like chimneys and the world made into a lighter?
3. What message does this picture convey?
Ans:
1. It represents ‘Industrial Pollution’ commenting on ‘Global warming’.
2. Fingers denote pollution coming out of chimneys from industries and the lighter represents burning and depleting of natural resources.
3. This picture draws the attention of the world towards industrial pollution, if it continues on, flora and fauna will be depleted which will create an imbalance to the ecosystem.
Q49: Study the picture given below and answer the questions that follow:
1. What does the cartoon represent?
2. Which countries are being shown here?
3. What message does this picture convey?
Ans:
1. The cartoon represents the methods adopted by industrialized countries to fulfill their essentials from weaker sections.
2. The stronger country like the USA and the weaker nation like Iraq.
3. Resources are the real strength of a nation and neo-colonialism play politics to obtain it.
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