Abstract:
Environmental and socio-cultural considerations have often been ignored or neglected in
development projects in developing countries which resulted in the deterioration of
environment and disruption of socio-cultural fabric. One man’s folly is another man’s
fortune. The far reaching impacts of water resources development projects, no doubt
makes the nation prosperous, but those who sacrifice are usually deprived of. The areas
submerged and the inhabitants dislocated with numerous reminiscences and cultural ties
are obviously ignored and tempted with negligible amount of compensation , which is, in
no way can bring back their social associations. Researchers did a lot, covering the
technical aspects of Tarbela dam and talked high on the replacement of land to the
affectees but turned deaf ear to the psychological and sociological shocks which the
affectees are still suffering in. They are still remembering earlier glories of their ancestral
lives and the attachment which a native may realize for his birth place. How one can
forget the places where one played and the rills one enjoyed. They felt the project had
problems with adequately compensating and resettling the affectees.
The present study is an evaluation study to bring out the socio- cultural and environmental
impacts of Tarbela Dam affectees. Major hypotheses of the research were; resettlement
policies were not efficiently designed and there was inconsistency in the implementation
of resettlement program so the project has adversely impacted the family linkage, socio-
economic conditions and local traditional values of the affectees. Primary data was
collected through field survey. Site visits and detailed discussions with local people and
the officials of the various line departments were also made to get in depth understanding
of the problems. Field data was analyzed through a statistical package SPSS.PC. In order
to test the hypothesis various tests were applied. Chi-square tests were applied to find out
relationship between the variables. Association between variables was found by P-value.
To find out the strength of association / effect size between independent and dependent
variables, Phi, Kendall’s tau-b and Spearman Correlation tests were applied. All these
results of the research support the hypothesis and conclude that the project has adversely
impacted the socio-cultural and psychological conditions of the affectees that need to be
properly addressed. In the light of this research some suitable measures are proposed for
the elimination or amelioration of such impacts for future projects. This will be helpful to
pave the way for sustainable development.