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This book explores the relationship between the production of new
urban spaces and illiberal community-making in contemporary India.
It is based on an ethnographic study in Noida, a city at the
eastern fringe of the state of Uttar Pradesh, bordering national
capital Delhi. The book demonstrates a flexible planning approach
being central to the entrepreneurial turn in India's
post-liberalisation urbanisation, whereby a small-scale industrial
township is transformed into a real-estate driven modern city. Its
real point of departure, however, is in the argument that this turn
can enable a form of illiberal community-making in new cities that
are quite different from older metropolises. Exclusivist forms of
solidarity and symbolic boundary construction - stemming from the
differences across communities as well as their internal
heterogeneities - form the crux of this process, which is examined
in three distinct but often interspersed socio-spatial forms:
planned middle-class residential quarters, 'urban villages' and
migrant squatter colonies. The book combines radical geographical
conceptualisations of social production of space and neoliberal
urbanism with sociological and anthropological approaches to urban
community-making. It will be of interest to researchers in
development studies, sociology, urban studies, as well as readers
interested in society and politics of contemporary India/South
Asia.
West Bengal has often been perceived as somewhat of an aberration
in the wider context of a rather chaotic Indian democracy, as the
Left Front (spearheaded by the Communist Party of India-Marxist,
CPIM) demonstrated a rare instance of political stability,
decisively winning seven consecutive democratic elections from 1977
to 2006. Its development record has also been substantial, with a
focus on land reforms, the panchayati-raj institution, and an
agriculture centric development agenda. This book presents a
reappraisal of the political economic history of the CPIM/Left
Front regime against the backdrop of the Indian reform experience.
It examines two distinct areas: the conditions that necessitated
the regime to engineer a transition from an erstwhile
agricultural-based growth model to a more pro-market economic
agenda post-1991, and the political strategy employed to manage
such a transition, attract private capital and at the same time
sustain the regime's traditional rhetoric and partisan character.
In order to develop a more textured understanding of the recent
political developments in West Bengal, the author applies a
historically nuanced and inductive political-economic analysis,
which draws on published materials, and primary material such as
government documents and interviews (with bureaucrats, political
activists, members of the intelligentsia and ministers). A valuable
contribution to the ongoing debate in the literature on the drifts
underway with the Indian Left and India's economic transformation
post-1990s, this book will be of interest to academics in the field
of Political Science, Government, Political Economy and South Asian
Studies.
West Bengal has often been perceived as somewhat of an aberration
in the wider context of a rather chaotic Indian democracy, as the
Left Front (spearheaded by the Communist Party of India-Marxist,
CPIM) demonstrated a rare instance of political stability,
decisively winning seven consecutive democratic elections from 1977
to 2006. Its development record has also been substantial, with a
focus on land reforms, the panchayati-raj institution, and an
agriculture centric development agenda. This book presents a
reappraisal of the political economic history of the CPIM/Left
Front regime against the backdrop of the Indian reform experience.
It examines two distinct areas: the conditions that necessitated
the regime to engineer a transition from an erstwhile
agricultural-based growth model to a more pro-market economic
agenda post-1991, and the political strategy employed to manage
such a transition, attract private capital and at the same time
sustain the regime's traditional rhetoric and partisan character.
In order to develop a more textured understanding of the recent
political developments in West Bengal, the author applies a
historically nuanced and inductive political-economic analysis,
which draws on published materials, and primary material such as
government documents and interviews (with bureaucrats, political
activists, members of the intelligentsia and ministers). A valuable
contribution to the ongoing debate in the literature on the drifts
underway with the Indian Left and India's economic transformation
post-1990s, this book will be of interest to academics in the field
of Political Science, Government, Political Economy and South Asian
Studies.
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