Reading India: Selections from Economic and Political Weekly, Volume III (1991–2017)
$40.00
Author: | Edited by Pulapre Balakrishnan, Suhas Palshikar, and Nandini Sundar |
ISBN 13: | 9789352877782 |
Binding: | Softcover |
Language: | English |
Year: | 2019 |
Subject: | Economics |
About the Book
Contents
List of Tables and Figures
List of Abbreviations
Note to the Reader
Acknowledgements
Tumultuous Times (1991–2017): Through the Lens of the EPW Archives
Pulapre Balakrishnan, Suhas Palshikar, and Nandini Sundar
I—Society
1. Prehistory of Indian Environmentalism: Intellectual Traditions
Ramachandra Guha
2. Language and Schooling of Tribal Children: Issues Related to Medium of Instruction
Geetha B. Nambissan
3. Birth of a Goddess: “Vande Mataram,” Anandamath, and Hindu Nationhood
Tanika Sarkar
4. Films and Free Speech
A. G. Noorani
5. Neoliberal Subjectivity, Enterprise Culture, and New Workplaces: Organised Retail and Shopping Malls in India
Nandini Gooptu
6. Comparative Contexts of Discrimination: Caste and Untouchability in South Asia
Surinder S. Johdka and Ghanshyam Shah
7. Broken Lives and Compromise: Shadow Play in Gujarat
Harsh Mander
8. From Parliamentary to Paramilitary Democracy
Sumanta Banerjee
9. The Bhopal Disaster and Medical Research
C. Sathyamala and N. D. Jayaprakash
10. Masculine Spaces: Rural Male Culture in North India
Prem Chowdhry
11. Lives in Debt: Narratives of Agrarian Distress and Farmer Suicides
Ajay Dandekar and Sreedeep Bhattacharya
II—Economy
12. Indian Economy at the Crossroads
Dilip Mookherjee
13. Paradox of Competitiveness and Globalisation of Underdevelopment
Kalyan K. Sanyal
14. Growth, Poverty, and Reforms
Jagdish Bhagwati
15. Terms of Trade, Trade, and Technical Change: Strategies for Agricultural Growth
Bhupat M. Desai
16. Impact of Reservation in Panchayati Raj: Evidence from a Nationwide Randomised Experiment
Raghabendra Chattopadhyay and Esther Duflo
17. The Three Rs of Reform
Amartya Sen
18. Limits of Amartya Sen’s “Three Rs of Reform”
G. Haragopal
19. A Model of Growth of the Contemporary Indian Economy
Prabhat Patnaik
20. The Case for Direct Cash Transfers to the Poor
Devesh Kapur, Partha Mukhopadhyay, and Arvind Subramanian
21. National Manufacturing Policy: Making India a Powerhouse?
Sunil Mani
22. Flawed Cartography?: A New Road Map for Monetary Policy
D. M. Nachane
23. Dynamics of Income Inequality in India: Insights from the World Top Incomes Database
Amit Basole
24. Making Indian Agriculture More Resilient: Some Policy Priorities
Madhur Gautam
25. Economic Reforms and Manufacturing Sector Growth: Need for Reconfiguring the Industrialisation Model
R. Nagaraj
III—Polity
26. Left Secularists and Communalism
Dharma Kumar
27. Electoral Politics in the Time of Change: India’s Third Electoral System, 1989–99
Yogendra Yadav
28. Representation for Women: Should Feminists Support Quotas?
Meena Dhanda
29. Socio-political Unrest in the Region Called North-east India
U. A. Shimray
30. Sino-Indian Boundary Dispute, 1948–60: A Reappraisal
Srinath Raghavan
31. Democracy and Economic Transformation in India
Partha Chatterjee
32. Caste in Twenty First–century India: Competing Narratives
Sonalde Desai and Amaresh Dubey
33. Secularism: Its Content and Context
Akeel Bilgrami
Notes on the Editors and Contributors
The period 1991–2017 was marked by communal aggression, the official start of economic liberalisation, growing inequality, and state militarisation. All of these have been reflected in the pages of the Economic and Political Weekly, which stood steadfast witness—quietly, reflectively, but also urgently and passionately.
Reading India, Vol. III (1991–2017), the final commemorative volume celebrating 50 years of the EPW, provides a selection of papers published during this period, reflecting on the social, political, and economic changes of the time. The chapters focus on five themes that dominated India’s public sphere: the question of secularism versus communalism; social justice and power-sharing by the backward castes; political configurations in a post-Congress polity; the entrenchment of impunity instead of the rule of law; and the political economy of economic policy.
The contributors to this volume have observed, analysed, and commentated on a range of topics, from the lack of justice for victims of the 2002 Gujarat massacres, farmer suicides, and agrarian distress, to the Indo–China border dispute. Focusing on India’s society, economy, and polity, the volume includes research on the environment, health, education, censorship, and free speech, among other themes which have formed subjects of prescient debates that will help us to make sense of the present times as well.