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ID149615
Title ProperContested capacity of the Indian state
LanguageENG
AuthorNaseemullah, Adnan
Summary / Abstract (Note)State capacity is often seen as simply the resources and capabilities of state organizations to perform those functions that are seen as essential to monopolizing coercion, maintaining legitimacy, and providing key public and social goods. As such, it is often conceptualized as value-neutral and comparable across national contexts. By contrast, this article posits that in the Indian context, state capacity is a politically contested concept, because there is deep and enduring political conflict in India over the appropriate roles and related capabilities of state power. This conflict is grounded in disagreements between those who wish to use the state as a tool to transform society and those who see it as a means to preserve and protect social relations. As a result of this conflict, the state in India is not weak or captured but internally divided and thus disarticulated. This article demonstrates these dynamics through an examination of state intervention in the statist and post-liberalization political economy of India.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 15, No.4; Oct-Dec 2016: p.407-432
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol: 15 No 4
Key WordsIndian State ;  Contested Capacity


 
 
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