"Beautifully written, Enduring Erosions sheds important light on a little understood but much discussed phenomenon that many scholars continue to make careless assumptions about. It skillfully combines a socio-technical discussion of erosion with a profoundly ethnographic account of how coastal communities perceive it. Most importantly, it provides a critical corrective to portrayals of those on the bleeding edge of environmental change as passive victims of broader systems." - Jason Cons, The University of Texas at Austin
"Arne Harms combines nuanced theoretical orientation to the anthropology of disasters with careful, sensitive, and insightful ethnographic attention to the experience of living in the face of erosion. His work contributes to a growing literature on the ways that the impacts of climate change in the Sundarbans region are entangled with the complicated physical and social histories of ecological change. At every turn, Harms refuses tidy explanations of causality and responsibility for the transformations happening in this coastal landscape, bringing into focus the complex practices of inhabiting and making meaning of livelihoods and landscapes in flux." - Kasia Paprocki, London School of Economics and Political Science