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ID152617
Title ProperCountry politics and Agrarian systems
Other Title Informationland grab on Bengal frontiers, 1750–1800
LanguageENG
AuthorLudden, David
Summary / Abstract (Note)The forceful expropriation of land, labour, water, and other productive resources is fundamental for processes of agricultural expansion and intensification. What is known today as ‘land grab’ was theorized by Marx as ‘primitive accumulation’ and by David Harvey as ‘accumulation by dispossession’. Today it is most prominent and controversial in Africa, where the governments of India and China are major perpetrators; and it also drives most contemporary urban expansion in India and China. This article deploys David Washbrook's idea of ‘country politics’ to explore the process of land grabbing in the early-modern expansion of agrarian Bengal, where local peasant society and worldwide imperial political economy came together to expand frontiers of farming in what is now the Sylhet District of Bangladesh.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 51, No.2; Mar 2017: p.319-349
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2017-04 51, 2
Key WordsLand Grab ;  Country Politics ;  Agrarian Systems ;  Bengal Frontiers ;  1750–1800