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ID078984
Title Properpolitical economy of the cycles of violence and non-violence in the Sikh struggle for identity and political power
Other Title Informationimplications for Indian federalism
LanguageENG
AuthorSingh, Pritam
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper presents a critique of the essentialist notions of any community as a pacifist or militant community by examining the long history of the cycles of violence and non-violence in the evolution of the Sikh community in the Indian subcontinent. The theoretical premise of the paper is that communities' resort to violence and non-violence is determined by their strategic perspectives to achieve their politico-economic goals and not from any doctrinal adherence to violence or non-violence. The paper attempts a panoramic view of over 500 years of Sikh history (1469 - 2006) and offers a reinterpretation of that history by locating cycles of violence and non-violence in their historical context. It then provides a politico-economic perspective on violence and non-violence in their struggle for identity and political power. It focuses more on an analysis of the recent political conflict between Sikh militants and the Indian state, and concludes by drawing out the policy implications of that analysis for the politics of the modern Indian state regarding the Sikhs of Punjab. It identifies federal arrangements and human rights as issues of key importance in the political economy of this relationship.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quaterly Vol. 28, No.3; 2007: p555-570
Journal SourceThird World Quaterly Vol: 28 No 3
Key WordsPolitical Economy ;  Identity ;  Non-Violence ;  Sikh Struggle for Identity ;  Federalism ;  India