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ID160163
Title ProperPublic authority and local resistance
Other Title InformationAbdur Rehman and the industrial workers of Lahore, 1969–1974
LanguageENG
AuthorMALIK, ANUSHAY
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 1968 a popular movement emerged on the streets of Pakistan which toppled the regime of General Muhammad Ayub Khan and ushered in the Pakistan People's Party (PPP). After a decade of military rule this movement was heralded as a turning point in the country's political fortunes. However, the war in 1971, the failure of the PPP to live up to its radical slogans, and Pakistan's eventual return to military rule in 1977 were seen as clear indications of the failure of both the movement and the PPP. This article focuses on the area of Kot Lakhpat in Lahore and the emergence of a worker-led court under Abdur Rehman to argue that this narrative of the failure of the movement does not leave space for local success stories which, while temporary, had an important impact on the role that the working classes imagined for themselves within the state. The Kot Lakhpat movement was part of a longer history of labour politics, and its story challenges the centrality of the PPP and shows how local structures of authority can be formed in response to the greater space for radical action opened up by a wider national resistance movement.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 52, No.3; May 2018: p.815-848
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2018-06 52, 3
Key WordsLocal Resistance ;  Public Authority ;  Abdur Rehman ;  Industrial Workers of Lahore ;  1969–1974