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  4. Caste Inequality in Occupational Exposure to Heat Waves in India
 
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Caste Inequality in Occupational Exposure to Heat Waves in India

Source
Demography
ISSN
00703370
Date Issued
2025-02-01
Author(s)
Shah, Arpit
Thapliyal, Sneha
Sugathan, Anish
Mishra, Vimal  
Malghan, Deepak
DOI
10.1215/00703370-11803010
Volume
62
Issue
1
Abstract
India is a leading global hot spot for extreme heat waves induced by climate change. The social demography of India is centered on its caste hierarchy rooted in endogamous occupational groups. We investigate the association between caste and climate inequality by studying occupational exposure during the 2019 and 2022 heat waves. We combine high spatiotemporal resolution heat stress information from satel lite imagery with a large nationally and regionally representative labor force survey with rich socioeconomic and demographic information (n > 100,000 individuals). The slope of the heat stress dose–workhours curve corresponding to the marginalized caste groups is between 25% and 150% steeper than that for dominant caste groups for UTCI (Universal Thermal Climate Index) thresholds between 26°C and 35°C. Our models control for other economic-demographic confounders, including age, gender, education, and economic status, besides political-geographic controls and fixed effects. Our robust evidence for the association between caste identity and exposure to heat stress shows why adaptation and mitigation plans in India must account for the hierarchical social order characterized by the “division of laborers” along caste lines rather than the mere division of labor. Methodologically, our analysis demonstrates the utility of pairing satellite imagery and detailed demographic data.
Publication link
https://doi.org/10.1215/00703370-11803010
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/28275
Subjects
Caste | Climate change and demography | Extreme heat | Paired data
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