
Over the last few decades, politics in India has moved steadily in a pro-business direction. This shift has important implications for both government and citizens. In Business and Politics in India, leading scholars of Indian politics have gathered to offer an analytical synthesis of this vast topic. Collectively, they cover the many strategies that businesses have used to exert their newfound power in recent times and organize the book around a few central concerns. They first analyze the nature of business power and how it shapes political change in India. Second, they look at the consequences of business' growing power on some important issue areas-labor, land, urban governance, and the media. Finally, they take account of regional variation and analyze state-business relations. This definitive account offers significant insights into how and why corporations have increased their power in contemporary Indian politics.
This volume investigates the mechanisms through which business interests have increasingly influenced Indian political processes and governance over the past several decades. The editors, Christophe Jaffrelot, Kanta Murali, and Atul Kohli, curate a collection of essays from prominent scholars to examine the structural shift toward pro-business policies. The text provides a framework for understanding how corporate power interacts with state institutions, labor relations, and public policy outcomes in the contemporary Indian context.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant academic resource for understanding the intersection of capital and state power in South Asia. Readers frequently note the scholarly density of the prose and the rigorous analytical approach applied to complex political-economic phenomena.
Page Count:
334
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190912499
ISBN-13:
9780190912499
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