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The State and Peasant Politics in Sri Lanka
Dr Moore's enterprising book focuses on an apparent paradox in the politics of Sri Lanka.
Mick Moore (Author)
9780521047760, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 3 December 2007
348 pages
21.6 x 14.1 x 2 cm, 0.462 kg
Dr Moore's enterprising book focuses on an apparent paradox: the failure of Sri Lanka's highly politicized smallholder electorate to place on the national political agenda issues relating to the public distribution of material resources. Sri Lanka has more than fifty years' history of pluralist democracy and such issues directly affect the interests of the smallholder population. Yet successive Sri Lankan governments have pursued economic policies favouring food consumers and the state itself at the expense of agricultural producers. In exploring the features of Sri Lanka's history, geography, politics and economy which explain this paradox, the author looks in detail at some of the dominant features of contemporary Sri Lanka: the political consequences of the plantation experience; the persistence of elite political leadership; and the causes and consequences of ethnic conflict.
List of maps
List of tables
Acknowledgements
Glossary of Sri Lankan terms
1. Puzzles and agendas
2. Methods, scope and elaborations
3. Crown lands
4. Land reform
5. Pricing and agricultural services
6. Categorising space: urban-rural and core-periphery
7. A smallholder interest or smallholder interests?
8. Rural consciousness
9. Ethnic conflict and the politics of the periphery
10. The Sri Lankan polity
11. Concluding remarks
Appendices
Notes
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP]
