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The Palgrave Handbook of New Directions in Kashmir Studies provides
a comprehensive, interdisciplinary and transregional perspective on
the Kashmir dispute. Spanning South and Central Asia, Kashmir has
been at the center of geopolitical conflicts and rivalries among
India, Pakistan and China for decades, with members of
heterogeneous local communities negotiating the complexities of
regional state formations, national power assertions and
geopolitical competitions. Taken together, the chapters in this
handbook examine diverse people’s struggles to establish
processes of democratic accountability in relation to the
colonial-era state consolidations, postcolonial military
occupations, interstate wars, intrastate armed conflicts and cold
war and post-cold war politics that have shaped and transformed
social and political identities in the region. Contributors chart
out varied and bold new directions by attending to local
constellations of situated knowledges and practices through which
people living in different parts of the disputed region make sense
of the conditions and contingencies of their political lives. The
handbook further initiates a dialogue on the ways in which state
power and border regimes have shaped scholarship and undermined the
pursuit of shared intellectual and political projects across
physical and epistemological boundaries.
- first comprehensive reference work on contemporary Kashmir and
Kashmir studies. - set of international contributors, both
established and emerging scholars. - complements our suite of
handbooks on South Asian Studies.
The last decade has been a transformative period in Kashmir, the
hotly contested and densely militarized border territory located
high in the Himalayan mountains between India and Pakistan.
Suppressed and unheard, Kashmiri political aspirations were
subordinated to larger geopolitical concerns-by opposing
governments laying claim to Kashmir, by security experts promoting
bilateral peace settlements in the region, and by academic
researchers studying the conflict. But since 2008, Kashmiris who
grew up in the midst of armed insurgency and counterinsurgency
warfare have been deploying new strategies for challenging India's
state and military apparatus and projecting their legal and
political claims for freedom from Indian rule to global audiences.
Resisting Occupation in Kashmir analyzes the social and legal logic
of India's occupation of Kashmir in relation to colonialism,
militarization, power, democracy, and sovereignty. It also traces
how Kashmiri youth are drawing on the region's long history of
armed rebellion against Indian domination to reimagine the freedom
struggle in the twenty-first century. Resisting Occupation in
Kashmir presents new ways of thinking and writing about Kashmir
that cross conventional boundaries and point toward alternative
ways of conceptualizing the past, present, and future of the
region. The volume brings together junior and senior scholars from
various disciplinary backgrounds who have conducted extensive
fieldwork during the past decade in various regions of Kashmir. The
contributors, many of whom were born and raised during the peak of
the conflict in the 1990s, offer ethnographically grounded
perspectives on contemporary social, legal, and political life in
ways that demonstrate the multiplicity of experiences of Kashmiri
communities. The essays highlight the ways in which this scholarly
orientation-built through collaboration and dialogue across
different kinds of borders-offers a new critical approach to
Kashmir studies at this transformative and generative moment.
Contributors: Mona Bhan, Haley Duschinski, Farrukh Faheem, Gowhar
Fazili, Bruce Hoffman, Mohamad Junaid, Seema Kazi, Ershad Mahmud,
Cynthia Mahmood, Saiba Varma, Ather Zia.
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