The Politics of Dispossession: Theorizing India’s “Land Wars”
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Levien, Michael (Author)
Title
The Politics of Dispossession: Theorizing India’s “Land Wars”
Abstract
While struggles over land dispossession have recently proliferated across the developing world and become particularly significant in India, this paper argues that existing theories of political agency do not capture the specificity of the politics of dispossession. Based on two years of ethnographic research on anti-dispossession movements across rural India, the paper argues that the dispossession of land creates a specific kind of politics, distinct not just from labor politics, but also from various other forms of peasant politics that have been theorized in the social sciences. It illustrates how the process of land dispossession itself shapes the targets, strategy and tactics, organization, social composition, goals, and ideologies of anti-dispossession struggles. It concludes with reflections on why land conflicts are less easily institutionalized than labor conflicts and may therefore constitute a significantly disruptive force in the emerging centers of global capitalism for the foreseeable future.
Publication
Politics & Society
Volume
41
Issue
3
Pages
351-394
Date
September 2013
Journal Abbr
Politics & Society
Language
English
ISSN
00323292
Short Title
The Politics of Dispossession
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Levien, Michael. 2013. “The Politics of Dispossession: Theorizing India’s ‘Land Wars.’” Politics & Society 41 (3): 351–94. DOI: 10.1177/0032329213493751.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- accumulation by dispossession
- agrarian change
- agriculture
- capitalism
- eviction
- India
- land grabs
- peasant politics
- peasants
- property rights
- social movements
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