Dalits and Adivasis in India’s Business Economy: Three Essays and an Atlas

Pub. October 2013, vi + 190 pages, Double demy (8.5 in. x 11 in.; 216 mm x 279 mm)

ISBNs: 978-81-88789-86-3

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Description

India’s founding fathers and neo-liberalisers alike expected economic development to dissolve ‘archaic’ forms of exchange, but the modern Indian economy remains embedded in caste relations. At the base of the caste hierarchy are formerly untouchable and tribal workers. But a growing minority of dalits and adivasis have been incorporated into the Indian economy not as workers but as owners of firms.

The Atlas shows the striking and consistent regional and sectoral differences in the way dalits and adivasis have been incorporated into 14 occupational sectors of the business economy at both state and district levels of resolution over the period 1990 – 2005. Explaining these differences and some adverse trends during the era of globalisation is a task that the three essays accompanying the Atlas attempt to begin.

Using contemporary field research, dalit narratives and statistical data they explore the dalit experience of disadvantageous entry into markets, the state and civil society; their adverse experience of business associations regulating markets; and the surprisingly distinctive patterns of regional disadvantage that dalit and adivasi businesses suffer.

This unusual book is a ‘must-read’ for everyone concerned with India’s development and social justice. It also generates an agenda for a new wave of activist- researchers.

CONTENTS

Essays

DALIT CAPITAL IN THE NEW INDIA
Aseem Prakash and Barbara Harriss-White

SCHEDULED AND BACKWARD CASTES IN THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF ACCUMULATION:
THE CASE OF A SMALL TOWN ECONOMY IN SOUTH INDIA
Barbara Harriss-White and Elisabetta Basile

REGIONS OF DALIT AND ADIVASI DISCRIMINATION IN INDIA’S BUSINESS ECONOMY
Barbara Harriss-White, Kaushal Vidyarthee and Anita Dixit

Atlas

AN ATLAS OF DALIT AND ADIVASI PARTICIPATION IN THE INDIAN BUSINESS ECONOMY, 1990-2005
Barbara Harriss-White, Kaushal Vidyarthee and Pinaki Joddar

vi+190 pages, double demy (8.5 in. x 11 in.; 216 mm x 279 mm),
105 colour plates (maps), 77 pages of text. Includes bibliographies and index,
hardbound in cloth.

Front image: Untitled by Lakshmidhar Malaviya. Back: Mahipalpur by Asad Zaidi

Barbara Harriss-White

Barbara Harriss-White has been Professor of Development Studies at Queen Elizabeth House and Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford University, UK. Since 1969 she has researched agrarian change in South Asia through field studies of villages, small town economies and markets. In recent years her focus has been on dalits in Indian economy, on which she has lectured and initiated workshops both in India and in England.

She has authored 14 books, edited 10 books, 11 major reports (research consultancies), 122 chapters in books, 3 encyclopedia, 53 papers in journals, 35 working papers. Her well-known books are ‘India Working: Essays in Society and Economy’; Rural India Facing the 21st Century; Outcaste from Welfare: Adult Disability in Rural South India.

Her other interests include environment and climate change.