Anil agarwal environmentalist biography template
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Remembering Anil Agarwal : The visionary environmentalist who predicted our future
When Anil passed away in the year 2002, he left behind a void which has been difficult to fill. But he also left behind a vision, and he injected in all of us that same incredible passion and drive which he was known for.
Today, as we receive yet another applause for all that he and CSE have stood for and continue standing for, we cannot but feel proud that we were led by someone like him in our formative years.
Anil Agarwal, the founder-director of Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), was a man unmatched for the sheer fire in his belly, and for his commitment. Anil had graduated as an engineer from one of India's leading engineering colleges in 1970 but gave up a promising technical career to become a science journalist.
In 1974, as a science correspondent in New Delhi with Hindustan Times, one of the country's leading dailies, Anil discovered India's most evocative environmental movement -- Chipko. His story was the first reportage on a people's movement to protect the environment, in India or probably anywhere else in the developing world.
In 1980, he founded CSE, one of India's first environmental NGOs to analyse and study the relationship between environment and development and a
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Facing a Hushed Spring
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Anil Agarwal Reader, Volumes 1, 2 and 3
These three volumes bring together a selection of the writings of Anil Agarwal, the remarkable environmental writer and activist, journalist and founder of the Centre for Science and Environment in Delhi – who died in early 2002 after a long battle with cancer. He was well known and greatly honoured, both for his work in India (for example, The State of India’s Environment 1982: a Citizen's Report, which set the tone and the standard from which comparable citizen reports on other nations were developed) and for his internationalism (for instance, the book Green Politics: Global Environmental Negotiations 1, edited with Sunita Narain and Anju Sharma, which was a landmark in making accessible the key global negotiations, and in bringing new pro-people, pro-poor, pro-Southern perspectives). Anil was also on the advisory board of this journal from its beginning – and the Centre for Science and Environment was the first institution that this journal profiled (in Vol 1, No 1, April 1989).
Anil Agarwal Reader 01
The first of these three volumes presents a selection of Anil Agarwal’s columns on “Green Politics”, published between 1991 and 1994 in the Delhi edition of The Economic Times newspaper. The articles focus on the environment–developm