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Ouvrages Année : 2003

India's silent revolution : the rise of the lower castes in North India

Résumé

India has long been dominated by the upper castes, most notably the Brahmins and the warrior castes whose influence permeates society at every level. Since the 1960s a new assertiveness has characterised this formerly silenced majority (the lower castes comprise more than two-thirds of the Indian population). Its growing political consciousness was first epitomised by Charan Singh’s efforts to build a peasant movement and then by the demand for job quotas for the low castes that V.P.Singh articulated in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Today, many official posts are ‘reserved’ for ‘Other Backward Classes’, namely the lower castes. India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh is controlled by lower caste politicians, as is Bihar, and lower caste representation in national politics is growing inexorably. The author of this text argues that this trend constitutes a genuine ‘democratisation’ of India and that the social and economic effects of this ‘silent revolution’ are bound to mutiply in the years to come.
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Dates et versions

hal-03416818 , version 1 (05-11-2021)

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Christophe Jaffrelot. India's silent revolution : the rise of the lower castes in North India. Hurst Publishers, pp.505, 2003, Comparative Politics and International Studies Series, 9780231127868. ⟨hal-03416818⟩
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