ID | 128535 |
Title Proper | Land, rights, and reform in India |
Language | ENG |
Author | Jenkins, Rob |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | India's legal regime governing the compulsory acquisition of private land by the state for "public purposes" - centered on the Land Acquisition Act 1894 (LAA) - has long been criticized for breeding corruption and insufficiently protecting landowners and local communities. Attempts to overhaul the LAA have faced stiff resistance from powerful interests within and outside the state. When the United Progressive Alliance government took power in 2004, few would have guessed that it would seek to replace the LAA with legislation that imposes more rigorous standards for the compulsory acquisition of land and detailed rules for rehabilitating displaced people. Yet, in 2011 the government introduced the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill (LARRB). This article argues (1) that the LARRB displays certain distinctive characteristics shared by other rights-related statutes enacted under the UPA government; (2) that the emergence of this distinctive - and unforeseen - piece of legislation was driven largely by India's approach to creating Special Economic Zones; and (3) that both the LARRB's content and the process by which it was introduced have implications for debates of wider theoretical significance, including the increasingly hybrid nature of rights, and the desirability of combining insights from the literatures on "policy feedback" and "policy entrepreneurs." |
`In' analytical Note | Pacific Affairs Vol.86, No.3; September 2013: p.591-612 |
Journal Source | Pacific Affairs Vol.86, No.3; September 2013: p.591-612 |
Key Words | Human Rights ; Land ; Land Acquisition ; Displacement ; Policy Reform ; India ; Rehabilitation ; Resettlement ; Politics ; Land Conflicts ; Legal Regime ; Land Acquisition Act 1894 - LAA ; United Progressive Alliance - UPA ; Special Economic Zones ; Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill - LARRB ; Economic Development ; Urbanization ; Land Reform ; Policy Entrepreneurs |