Employment, Poverty and Rights in India

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A01=Dayabati Roy
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Author_Dayabati Roy
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bengal
Bhadralok Elites
caste discrimination
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=GTF
Category=GTP
Category=JBFC
Category=JFFA
Category=JPQB
Civil Society
Communist Left
Concerned NGO
COP=United Kingdom
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economy
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ethnographic research methods
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Format_Hardback
front
Good Life
grass
Hindu Succession Act
India's Democratic System
India’s Democratic System
labour market dynamics
Language_English
left
marginalised communities employment rights
Middle Castes
Minimum Social Cost
NGO Sector
PA=Available
Panchayat Representatives
peasant
Political Parties
Price_€100 and above
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Rich Peasantry
roots
rural
Rural Grass Roots
rural livelihoods
Rural Poor
Rural Unemployment
Rural West Bengal
Scheduled Castes
small
Small Peasant Economy
SN=Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series
social exclusion India
softlaunch
ST Community
Subsistence Ethic
Tamil Nadu
Wage Employment Programmes
welfare policy analysis
west
West Bengal
World Development Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138479586
  • Format: Hardback
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In comparison to other social groups, India’s rural poor – and particularly Adivasis and Dalits - have seen little benefit from the country’s economic growth over the last three decades. Though economists and statisticians are able to model the form and extent of this inequality, their work is rarely concerned with identifying possible causes.

Employment, Poverty and Rights in India analyses unemployment in India and explains why the issues of employment and unemployment should be the appropriate prism to understand the status of wellbeing in India. The author provides a historical analysis of policy interventions on behalf of the colonial and postcolonial state with regard to the alleviation of unemployment and poverty in India and in West Bengal in particular. Arguing that, as long as poverty - either as a concept or as an empirical condition - remains as a technical issue to be managed by governmental technologies, the ‘poor’ will be held responsible for their own fate and the extent of poverty will continue to increase. The book contends that rural unemployment in India is not just an economic issue but a political process that has consistently been shaped by various socio-economic, political and cultural factors since the colonial period. The analysis which depends mainly on ethnography extends to the implementation of the ‘New Rights Agenda’, such as the MGNREGA, at the rural margin.

Challenging the dominant approach to poverty, this book will be of interest to scholars working in the fields of South Asian studies, Indian Political Economy, contemporary political theories, poverty studies, neo-liberalism, sociology and social anthropology as well as development studies.

Dayabati Roy is Faculty Member in the Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Finland. She has published articles in various journals including Modern Asian Studies and she is the author of Rural Politics in India: Political Stratification and Governance in West Bengal (2013).

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