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Seeing the State
Governance and Governmentality in India

The book focuses on the relationship between the poor and the state in India.

Stuart Corbridge (Author), Glyn Williams (Author), Manoj Srivastava (Author), René Véron (Author)

9780521834797, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 22 September 2005

334 pages, 16 tables
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.5 cm, 0.658 kg

Poor people confront the state on an everyday basis all over the world. But how do they see the state, and how are these engagements conducted? This book considers the Indian case where people's accounts, in particular in the countryside, are shaped by a series of encounters that are staged at the local level, and which are also informed by ideas that are circulated by the government and the broader development community. Drawing extensively on fieldwork conducted in eastern India and their broad range of expertise, the authors review a series of key debates in development studies on participation, good governance, and the structuring of political society. They do so with particular reference to the Employment Assurance Scheme and primary education provision. Seeing the State engages with the work of James Scott, James Ferguson and Partha Chatterjee, and offers a new interpretation of the formation of citizenship in South Asia.

Part I. The State and the Poor: 1. Seeing the state
2. Technologies of rule and the war on poverty
Part II. The Everyday State and Society: 3. Meeting the state
4. Participation
5. Governance
6. Political society
Part III. The Poor and the State: 7. Protesting the state
8. Postcolonialism, development studies and spaces of empowerment
9. Postscript: development ethics and the ethics of critique.

Subject Areas: Comparative politics [JPB], Politics & government [JP], Development studies [GTF], Regional studies [GTB]

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