Dozer and development in Panchthar district, Nepal
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Abstract
Globally, infrastructure development such as road connectivity is one of the indicators of
development. After the 1990s, Nepal’s road construction to connect rural areas to urban centers
became the major developmental intervention. Such practice continues to effect throughout the
Panchthar District after the formation of three tiered governments culminated of the regime
change of 2006 after the decade long Maoist insurgency. Panchthar District is known for access
road construction compared to other districts in the country. The present research attempts to
understand road construction phenomenon via qualitative study approach following the
thematic analysis. Although road construction in the district have contributed positively to
livelihood outcomes by addressing five basic needs such as food, shelter, education, health,
and employment. Alternatively, poorly designed and constructed roads put lives and properties
at risk. The study revealed poor access roads are the leading cause of the social capital loss,
recurrence of disasters and also the migration. Family tragedies because of deaths are added
psychological impact in the community. The study suggests, ecological impact can be
addressed through compliance measures required by the national laws and avoiding,
minimizing and mitigation measures towards negative consequences such as by following
environmental and social safeguard measures. For such measures to be effective community
awareness and capacity building is quintessential to balance the needs and wants of the people
aspiring for sustainable community development for now and to the future.
Keywords: Connectivity, poorly designed, disasters, impact, compliance
