Irrigation and Famine in Colonial India: A Case Study of the United Provinces (1817-1903)

International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR)

International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR)

An Open Access, Peer-reviewed, Bi-Monthly Journal

ISSN: 3048-9490

Call For Paper - Volume - 2 Issue - 5 (September - October 2025)
Article Title

Irrigation and Famine in Colonial India: A Case Study of the United Provinces (1817-1903)

Author(s) Raghuvendra Pandey, Dr. Jyotsana Sonal.
Country India
Abstract

This paper explores the relationship between irrigation policy, famine prevention, and colonial revenue priorities in the United Provinces of India between 1817 and 1903. Beginning with the famine of 1837, which triggered the construction of the Upper Ganga Canal, the study traces how canal-building evolved from a limited experiment to a major state enterprise. British officials publicly justified canals as protective works designed to mitigate drought and stabilise agriculture, yet their design, financing, and operation reveal a consistent emphasis on revenue extraction and the promotion of commercial agriculture. Using irrigation commission reports, famine commission proceedings, canal revenue data, and critiques by R.C. Dutt, Whitcombe, and Ian Stone, this paper analyses how protective and productive works were conceptualized, funded, and managed. The paper argues that irrigation policy under colonial rule was shaped by a dual objective: to secure political stability by reducing the risk of famine while ensuring that investments yielded fiscal returns. The introduction of canals expanded wheat cultivation and enhanced agricultural production, but also deepened market dependence and reinforced local hierarchies, as water distribution was often controlled by landlords and dominant castes. While canals reduced vulnerability to drought and created employment, they also produced ecological challenges such as waterlogging, soil salinity, and outbreaks of malaria. By situating canal construction within the wider political economy of empire, this study highlights how irrigation served both as a tool of famine relief and a mechanism of colonial control. These findings shed light on the structural tensions between revenue, relief, and agrarian resilience that defined British rule in northern India.

Area History
Issue Volume 2, Issue 5, October 2025
Published 06-10-2025
How to Cite Pandey, R., & Sonal, J. (2025). Irrigation and Famine in Colonial India: A Case Study of the United Provinces (1817-1903). International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR), 2(5), 313-323, DOI: https://doi.org/10.70558/IJSSR.2025.v2.i5.30627.
DOI 10.70558/IJSSR.2025.v2.i5.30627

PDF View / Download PDF File