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ID162444
Title ProperColonial origins of maoist insurgency in India
Other Title Informationhistorical institutions and civil war
LanguageENG
AuthorMukherjee, Shivaji
Summary / Abstract (Note)What are the long-term effects of colonial institutions on insurgency? My article shows the historical origins of insurgency by addressing the puzzle of why the persistent Maoist insurgency, considered to be India’s biggest internal security threat, affects some districts along the central eastern corridor of India but not others. Combining archival and interview data from fieldwork in Maoist zones with an original district-level quantitative data set, I demonstrate that different types of British colonial indirect rule set up the structural conditions of ethnic inequality and state weakness that facilitate emergence of Maoist control. I address the issue of selection bias, by developing a new instrument for the British choice of indirect rule through princely states, based on the exogenous effect of wars in Europe on British decisions in India. This article reconceptualizes colonial indirect rule and also presents new data on rebel control and precolonial rebellions.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol. 62, No.10; Nov 2018: p.2232-2274
Journal SourceJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol: 62 No 10
Key WordsConflict ;  Insurgency ;  Civil Wars ;  India ;  Internal armed Conflict ;  Path Dependence ;  Maoist ;  Colonial Institutions


 
 
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