Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:467Hits:20416492Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID115260
Title ProperHuman rights as paradox and equivocation in contexts of Adivasi (original dweller) dispossession in India
LanguageENG
AuthorKapoor, Dip
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper advances the proposition that a dialectical appreciation of the politics of state-institutionalized human rights in colonial and neoliberal hegemonic (imperial) contexts helps to shed light on why Adivasi facing development displacement and dispossession are unlikely to advance their political and existential interests through recourse to an estatized human rights mechanism embedded in global and national political and economic structures imbricated in the historical projects of colonialism and imperialism (globalization of capitalism). Adivasi social movement inspired 'human rights' (and related conceptions) informed by an anti-colonial/imperial project that transgress these trajectories continue to provide the primary political impetus for asserting the continued place of Adivasi (see Kapoor, 2011 for an elaboration on such assertions). The paper is informed by funded research into 'Learning in Adivasi social movements in eastern India' (2006-2009), the author's relationship with Adivasi and rural movements/activism in this region since the early 1990s, and secondary literature addressing the politics of human rights in Adivasi contexts of development displacement and dispossession.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 47, No.4; Aug 2012: p.404-420
Journal SourceJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 47, No.4; Aug 2012: p.404-420
Key WordsAdivasi/Original ;  Dwellers ;  Anti/Colonialism ;  Hegemony ;  Human Rights ;  Empire/Neoliberalism ;  Social Movements