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This book explores identity-mediated dynamics of food and nutrition
entitlement in urban India analysing concerns around equity, access
to food and public health. The issues of disentitlement and
identity dynamics when it comes to nutrition and health are more
intricate in the urban context, due to a greater population and
cultural diversity. While in the global north, urban food planning
is increasingly dependent on local government, in developing
countries urban nutrition is yet to be considered a serious policy
issue. This book, with a disaggregated analysis for urban India and
an in-depth case study of Mumbai, examines how malnutrition in
India is becoming an urban challenge. It discusses how far caste,
religion and migratory identities serve as a source of deprivation
and analyses the role of local governance, particularly municipal
governance and urban planning, in facilitating the disentitlement.
It also offers suggestions for the global south to reverse the
stark inequality in its urban centres and address nutrition
challenges by developing their own sustainable and resilient food
systems. This book is an essential read for scholars and
researchers of public health, nutrition, urban sociology, urban
planning, development studies, political sociology, public policy
and political studies.
This book utilizes the School to Work Transition Survey (SWTS) of
the ILO to discuss what shapes an individual worker's decision to
participate in unionization and how her working condition is
affected by that.. There remains a disconnect as far as our
understanding of the relationship between the labour's choice to
unionize as individual actor and the broader socioeconomic,
political and cultural context of that choice, is concerned.Using
the SWTS data, the book focuses on the identification of the
correlates of workers' propensity to unionize, the outcomes of
unionizing and their synthesis with the wider political economy
context to arrive at stylized patterns in the way informal workers
exercise their agency.The book also reflects upon field data on
organizing challenges of migrant workers in the light of the
COVID-19 pandemic in India. The book does not claim to establish
any causality but is interested in bringing out broad patterns that
define informal workers' organizing in a particular context. In the
process, the book ends up with the preposition that despite all the
heterogeneities across regions, informal workers' organizing today
can be understood through the lens of pragmatism.
This volume proposes an alternative development paradigm to the
existing capitalist extant one, and studies how it is distinctly
different from the older system. Rooted in the principles of
solidarity between humans, as well as between humans and nature,
this alternative paradigm replaces the methodological individualism
of capitalism by ‘reciprocal altruism’, a new logic of capital,
to give pace and direction to the development process. The essays
in this volume highlight instances of various forms of solidarity
that have emerged in the contemporary world—such as resistance
movements of informal workers, the formation of an autonomous
cooperative of self-employed waste pickers in India, called SWaCH,
and Brazil and Cuba’s experiments with Social and Solidarity
Economy (SSE)—to achieve long sustaining cohesive development.
They also provide recommendations as to how the State can mold its
development process to the benefit of marginalized communities,
especially in India and Bangladesh. Featuring insights from leading
experts in the field, Theorizing Cohesive Development will be an
indispensable read for students and researchers of development
studies, economics, political economy, political science and
sociology, minority studies and Asian studies.
This volume proposes an alternative development paradigm to the
existing capitalist extant one, and studies how it is distinctly
different from the older system. Rooted in the principles of
solidarity between humans, as well as between humans and nature,
this alternative paradigm replaces the methodological individualism
of capitalism by 'reciprocal altruism', a new logic of capital, to
give pace and direction to the development process. The essays in
this volume highlight instances of various forms of solidarity that
have emerged in the contemporary world-such as resistance movements
of informal workers, the formation of an autonomous cooperative of
self-employed waste pickers in India, called SWaCH, and Brazil and
Cuba's experiments with Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE)-to
achieve long sustaining cohesive development. They also provide
recommendations as to how the State can mold its development
process to the benefit of marginalized communities, especially in
India and Bangladesh. Featuring insights from leading experts in
the field, Theorizing Cohesive Development will be an indispensable
read for students and researchers of development studies,
economics, political economy, political science and sociology,
minority studies and Asian studies.
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