Among the exceptional individuals who laid the intellectual and scientific foundations of environmental conservation in India—and challenged the dominant development discourse—Professor Madhav Dhondo Keshav Gadgil stands as a towering figure. He was not only a pioneering ecologist, but also among the first to view environmental protection through the lens of democracy, local communities and social justice.
Professor Madhav Gadgil passed away on 7 January 2026 at his Pune residence after a prolonged illness. He was 83. His life leaves behind a rich, enduring legacy in ecology and conservation science in India. Born on 24 April 1942 in Maharashtra, Gadgil completed his early schooling before earning a degree in biology from the University of Mumbai. He later travelled to the United States, where he obtained his PhD in ecology from Harvard University.
On returning to India, he dedicated his life to the study and protection of the country’s biodiversity, forests, natural resources and the lives of Indigenous and forest-dependent communities. As a longtime professor at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru, he played a crucial role in shaping ecology as a scientific discipline in India and inspired a generation of researchers and activists.
Gadgil’s work explored themes of biodiversity conservation, ecological systems, resource protection and the relationship between people and nature. He helped establish that forests could not be seen merely as storehouses of timber or mineral wealth—they were intimately connected with the livelihoods, culture and very survival of communities who lived in and around them.
He consistently argued that centralised, corporate-driven models of development deepen ecological imbalance and widen social inequality. In its place, he championed community-based resource management rooted in participation, shared stewardship and justice.
Professor Gadgil achieved national visibility when he chaired the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel, whose 2011 report recommended designating the Western Ghats as an ecologically sensitive region. The report called for strong restrictions on mining, large dams, unregulated urbanisation and industrial projects, while placing local governments and gram sabhas at the centre of decision-making. Though the report unsettled industry and several state governments—and was ultimately diluted—its clarity and courage still make it a reference point in India’s environmental debates.
Gadgil was also instrumental in shaping the Biological Diversity Act of 2002, and played a key role in enabling village-level biodiversity registers that recognise community knowledge and rights over natural resources.
Perhaps his most far-reaching contribution was the insistence that environmental protection is not just a scientific or technical endeavour, but a democratic right. He warned repeatedly that if environmental decisions were left to experts or corporations alone, destruction was inevitable. He saw the Forest Rights Act, gram sabha authority and traditional knowledge systems as fundamental to conservation—especially in a culturally diverse country like India.
Gadgil was honoured with the Padma Bhushan and numerous national and international awards, though he often said that his greatest reward was the public awareness and civic action that took root across India on environmental issues.
Today, as India stands at the crossroads of development, climate crisis and ecological disaster, Madhav Gadgil’s vision is a reminder that coexistence with nature is the only viable path to a sustainable future. He was more than a scientist; he was an architect of alternative development thinking. His life proves that real progress lies in balancing nature, society and democracy.
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*Bargi Dam Displaced and Affected Association

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