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ID103170
Title ProperMarginality, agency and power
Other Title Informationexperiencing the state in contemporary India
LanguageENG
AuthorWilliams, Philippa ;  Vira, Bhaskar ;  Chopra, Deepta
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The idea of the state has shown remarkable resilience over the last couple of decades, despite assaults on it from neoliberal doctrines and the forces of globalization. During this period, the abiding presence and role of the state has been particularly evident in the contemporary political life of the Asia Pacific region. This article pays special attention to the contemporary Indian state in the context of development. It reflects upon the ways in which the state is experienced, by focusing on questions of marginality, agency and power as they intersect the politics of development. By reading the empirical insights documented within this special issue against a rich trajectory of scholarship on the Indian state, the article argues that there has been a recent qualitative change in the way in which the contemporary Congress-led UPA government has presented itself to the common person. The implementation of pro-poor and more inclusive policies has altered the discursive landscape within which state-society interactions have taken place over the last five years. Importantly, these policies have functioned to reconfigure not only the material interactions between the state and India's marginalized, but also the imagined spaces within which marginal groups renegotiate their relationships with the state.
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol. 84, No. 1; Mar 2011: p.7-23
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol. 84, No. 1; Mar 2011: p.7-23
Key WordsState ;  Development ;  Politics ;  India ;  Marginality