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ID182422
Title ProperColonial Origins of Sons of the Soil Insurgency
Other Title InformationMaoist Rebellion in Central India
LanguageENG
AuthorMukherjee, Shivaji
Summary / Abstract (Note)What is the role of colonial institutions in creating the conditions for nativist sons of the soil (SoS) insurgency? The literature on sons of the soil conflicts has not explored the historical legacies of colonial institutions, nor has it sufficiently analyzed how land tenure institutions create sons of the soil conflict. I address these gaps, by proposing a theory of how British colonial indirect rule and land tenure institutions in India caused exploitation of land resources of indigenous tribes by ethnic outsiders, which caused SoS grievances that persisted through path dependence and were later mobilized by Maoist rebels in the former princely state of Bastar in Central India. I show generalizability of this mechanism to other cases of leftist insurgency in Colombia, Mexico and Philippines.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Security Vol. 17, No.3; Sep-Oct 2021: p.366-397
Journal SourceAsian Security Vol: 17 No 3
Key WordsMaoist Rebellion ;  Central India ;  Colonial Origins ;  Soil Insurgency


 
 
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