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El. knyga: Industrialising Rural India: Land, policy and resistance

Edited by (University of Oslo, Norway), Edited by (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)

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Industrialising Rural India sheds light on the current dynamics and contestations at work as India seeks to accelerate industrial growth and development. Rapid industrialisation is promoted by many as the quickest and most feasible way of rejuvenating an Indian economy that has produced sluggish growth rates over the past several years; and as an efficient way of generating rural employment on a large scale thereby bridging growing inequalities with urban areas. Yet at the same time, the transfer of land from marginal rural communities and indigenous groups for industries, mining or Special Economic Zones has proven to be probably themost explosive issues in India over the past decade.

Through a cutting-edge interdisciplinary approach, the book examines three crucial aspects of the current challenges and contestations at work in industrialising India. These are the making and influence of policy in rural industrialisation processes; the contested role of land, and the natural resource base more generally in connection with rural industrialisation; the popular resistance against Special Economic Zones, land acquisitions and forest destruction which have in many places derailed or delayed rural industrial projects.

Combining the work of scholars long established in their respective fields with the refreshing approach of younger scholars, this book charts new ways in the study of contemporary industrialisation and its associated challenges in India.

Recenzijos

"This crisply edited volume addresses compelling questions concerning the transformation of Indias economy: Why does development-induced displacement generate differing levels and types of political resistance? To what extent have so-called "tribal" communities been able to realize new rights accorded to them? How have Indias grassroots democratic institutions, and its diverse array of social movements, responded to the challenges posed by "extractive" industries, particularly mining? Some chapters address contemporary cases and confine themselves to a single region; others are broader in scope, temporally or geographically. Though diverse in their perspectives and preoccupations, the authors share one indispensible trait: they probe ambiguities, rather than wishing them away." - Rob Jenkins, City University of New York (CUNY), USA

"The fast growing economy in India is somewhat of a paradox. The growth is in the service sector and in the building industry, not in manufacture, not in mineral production. Conscious of this, the Indian State and Corporate Capital now try to exploit every possible natural resource for their industrial production and exports.

For long the need for state land expropriation was beyond questioning. Now it is increasingly contested by people threatened by loss of land and forest. With education and political practicing of citizens democratic rights, and with laws to protect forest people, people now increasingly fight back with all possible means, legal, political, non-violent or even violent. Indias democracy is deepening and broadening bit by bit but not without many obstacles.

This book gives a balanced account of ground realities in many concrete case studies. It helps us to grasp the odds of a sustainable development and not just devastating destruction of human lives and of nature." - Staffan Lindberg, Lund University, Sweden

"Indias quest to industrialize has been a fraught one. This collection of essays by a new generation of scholarship ably captures the complicated plots and troubling narratives about popular resistance, dispossession, displacement, Special Economic Zones and the consequences of extractive industries. Industrialization, however, as the editors are keen to remind us, also announces new beginnings and debates for democracy, livelihoods and alternative imaginations over what constitutes meaningful development. Critiques and challenges are not without hope. This is a very significant contribution, refreshing, seminal, empirically rich and tells us, above all else, that environmental politics and the everyday worlds of the disempowered give us a full ring side view into how neo-liberal economic growth uncurls on the ground." - Rohan DSouza, Kyoto University, Japan

"As the slogan of "Make in India" is amplified across the country, it sets in motion fresh waves of land alienation, cultural dispossession and ecological devastation. Industrialising Rural India offers a close and nuanced analysis of these processes, placing them within the nations long engagement with capital-intensive development and its current quest for global power. Attentive to the diversity of temporal and spatial trajectories, this important collection helps us understand the complexities of state-led capitalism and appreciate all the more the resistance it encounters on the ground. Recommended reading for everyone interested in Indian political economy and ecology." - Amita Baviskar, Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi, India

List of illustrations
ix
List of contributors
x
Acknowledgements xi
Part I Introduction
1(18)
1 Industrialising rural India
3(16)
Patrik Oskarsson
Kenneth Bo Nielsen
Part II Policy evolution
19(64)
2 `The dog that didn't bark' (very loudly) -- large-scale development projects with little protest in Nehru's India
21(19)
Jørgen Dige Pedersen
3 From state-led development to embedded neoliberalism: India's industrial and social policies in comparative perspective
40(23)
Stein Sundstøl Eriksen
4 `Should the son of a farmer always remain a farmer?' The ambivalence of industrialisation and resistance in West Bengal
63(20)
Sarasij Majumder
Kenneth Bo Nielsen
Part III Governing nature and society
83(76)
5 Coal as national development in India: transforming landscapes and social relations in the quest for energy security
85(22)
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt
6 A Different Story of Coal: The Power of Power in Northeast India
107(16)
Bengt G. Karlsson
7 The nature of bauxite mining and Adivasi livelihoods in the industrialisation of Eastern India
123(17)
Patrik Oskarsson
8 Resource extraction in Jharkhand's West Singhbhum: the continuing marginalisation of Adivasi livelihoods despite decentralisation
140(19)
Siddharth Sareen
Part IV The ambiguity of resistance
159(33)
9 Rural industry, the Forest Rights Act, and the performance(s) of proof
161(18)
Prakruti Ramesh
10 `We will need a passport to enter the site': envisioning land, industrialisation, and the state in Goa
179(13)
Heather Plumridge Bedi
Index 192
Kenneth Bo Nielsen is a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Sociology at the University of Bergen, Norway.

Patrik Oskarsson is a Researcher at the Department of Rural and Urban Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.