Colonial Legacies and Contemporary Destitution: Law, Race, and Human Security
A powerful new wave of alienating land from those who live on it is sweeping the global commons, and discourses such as "Emerging Economies" and "Brazil, Russia, India, China" are the ideological mediators of this wave. In India, the "slow violence" of the Nehruvian dec...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Alternatives: global, local, political local, political, 2015-05, Vol.40 (2), p.85-101 |
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description | A powerful new wave of alienating land from those who live on it is sweeping the global commons, and discourses such as "Emerging Economies" and "Brazil, Russia, India, China" are the ideological mediators of this wave. In India, the "slow violence" of the Nehruvian decades has been replaced by the accelerated pace of such processes under a neoliberal dispensation. In both periods, the overwhelming costs of "development" have been preponderantly visited upon Dalits, tribals, and landless laborers. Colonial laws regarding land acquisition and Eminent Domain have been an important legacy for the postcolonial state in its efforts to acquire land for private capital. They have intersected with notions of race and caste within the habitus of the Indian middle class, whose efforts to make the nation are simultaneously the unmaking of various subaltern groups and classes. Yet, as the struggle between the multinational Vedanta Corporation and a tribal group called the Dongaria Kondh in the Niyamgiri Hills of Odisha in southeastern India demonstrates, the outcomes are by no means a foregone conclusion. |
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subjects | Brazil Colonialism Corporations Decolonization Discourse analysis Eminent domain Human security Ideology India Land Law Mediators Middle Class Neoliberalism Peoples Republic of China Race Russia Violence |
title | Colonial Legacies and Contemporary Destitution: Law, Race, and Human Security |
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