India Working: Essays on Society and Economy

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Cambridge University Press, 2003 - 316 páginas
By drawing on her extensive fieldwork in India and on the adjacent theoretical literature, Barbara Harriss-White describes the working of the Indian economy through its most important social structures of accumulation. Successive chapters explore a range of topics including labour, capital, the state, gender, religious plurality, caste and space. Despite the complexity of the subject, the book is vivid and compelling. The author's intimate knowledge of the country enables the reader to experience the Indian local scene and to engage with the precariousness of daily life. Her conclusion challenges the prevailing notion that liberalisation releases the economy from political interference and leads to a postscript on the economic base for fascism in India. This is an intelligent book, first published in 2002, by a distinguished scholar, for students of economics, as well as for those studying the region.
 

Contenido

Preface and acknowledgments
x
List of maps figures and tables
xiv
Glossary
xvi
Abbreviations
xix
Introduction the character of the Indian economy
1
The workforce and its social structures
17
Indian development and the intermediate classes
43
The local State and the informal economy
72
Space and synergy
200
How India works
239
Postscript protofascist politics and the economy
248
Liberalisation and Hindu fundamentalism
256
Relations between the developmental State and the intermediate classes1
258
Roles of religious minorities in the Indian economy
264
References
272
Index of names
304

Gender family businesses and business families
103
Indias religious pluralism and its implications for the economy
132
Caste and corporatist capitalism
176

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Acerca del autor (2003)

Barbara Harriss-White is Professor of Development Studies at Queen Elizabeth House, and Fellow of Wolfson College, University of Oxford.

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