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Anthony D'Costa
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Anthony P. D'Costa, Chair & Professor of Contemporary Indian Studies
Australia India Institute and School of Social & Political Sciences
University of Melbourne
147-149 Barry Street, Carlton VIC 3053, AUSTRALIA
Ph: +61 3 9035 6161

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*The Return of the Land Question: Dispossession, Livelihoods, and
Contestation in India’s Capitalist Transition*



*Call for Papers*



*Conference Organised by the Faculty of Arts and Australia India Institute,
University of Melbourne; Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata; and the
Indian Institute of Management Calcutta*



*4-6 March 2014 at the Institute Development Studies Kolkata, India*



Successful industrial capitalism is predicated upon a transition from
feudal to capitalist agriculture through a process of what Marx called
‘primitive accumulation’. In Europe, leaving aside a few exceptions,
primitive accumulation lead to two distinct but inter-related outcomes: the
transfer of property rights from a ‘backward’ feudal landlord to a
‘progressive’ capitalist farmer on the one hand and the creation of ‘free’
labour through dispossession of the peasantry on the other. The emergence
of the capitalist farmer and wage labour therefore facilitated agrarian
accumulation, which then formed the basis for successful industrialisation.
Given the enormity of social transformation that primitive accumulation
entails, the process itself is always intensely contested. Successful
primitive accumulation therefore critically rests on a state-capital nexus
that midwives the transformation. Primitive accumulation during Europe’s
transition to capitalism occurred alongside its imperialist expansion that
shaped accumulation and market access and at a time when political
democracy as a form of popular representation was largely absent, removing
a potential constraint on the state-capital nexus.



East Asia’s development experience of late industrialisation tells us that
dispossession of peasantry is not a necessary condition for successful
capitalist transition. Indeed, in East Asia, successful industrialisation
is associated with successful land reform, which gave peasants some form of
rights to land, whether due to pressures from above (colonisation or
military occupation) or from below (popular movements). Successful land
reform then opened up pathways for rural industrialisation, employment
generation, rural-urban migration and urbanisation that have been quite
distinct from the European experience. East Asia’s industrialisation was
also predicated on global integration driven by market access provided by
the USA.



However, if successful capitalist transitions are not based on peasant
dispossession then there are important implications for the patterns of
industrialisation, employment generation, rural-urban migration and
land-use and therefore equity of growth outcomes. Peasant dispossession in
particular and dispossession in general becomes a critical arbiter of
livelihood outcomes.



Indian independence with limited land reforms implied a path of
dispossession through building of Nehruvian ‘temples of modern India’ –
irrigation, steel, power etc. by the public sector for which largely
*adivasi* (tribal) lands were acquired. It led neither to agrarian
transition nor democratic accommodation of contestation over land even
though major public sector projects had come to an end by the end of the
1980s.  It was in the post-reform, neoliberal phase of India’s capitalist
transition, particularly in the first decade of the 21st century when land
and dispossession came to the forefront again. In this period the Indian
economy witnessed historically unprecedented growth rates driven by private
corporate investment. This period was marked by two processes both of which
have shaped the contemporary land question -- an agrarian transition marked
by a widespread agrarian crisis of profitability and livelihoods and a
sharp increase in the globalisation of the economy. The demand by both
domestic and foreign capital to meet rising world demand secured access to
India’s mineral resources most of which are in *adivasi* land. This process
of land acquisition has been characterised (and by some therefore,
implicitly justified) as the phase of primitive accumulation associated
with capitalist transition. But as demand for non-agricultural land
increased for the creation of special economic zones (SEZs) and urban
real-estate, among other things, the agrarian crisis of livelihoods and
employment meant that peasants and *adivasis* resisted acquisition of land
and access to mineral resources.



This interdisciplinary conference seeks to understand the process of
dispossession and its ramifications for the political economy of capital
accumulation in the Indian economy. It therefore seeks to address, inter
alia, the following sets of issues: what is the nature of agrarian
accumulation that has resulted in the unwillingness of peasants to sell
land? What are the employment and livelihood challenges faced by the
dispossessed? What has been the nature of contestation that this process of
widespread dispossession has elicited? What is the nature of state-capital
relationship(s) that underpin this process and has this been constrained by
contestation from below within the context of a democratic polity? Who are
the stakeholders in this transition process? Has the process of
contestation and parliamentary democracy materially altered this process of
dispossession? If it has, will it materially alter the path of India’s
capitalist transition making possible a more inclusive growth process in
terms of employment and livelihoods and ending this neoliberal phase of
accumulation by dispossession? Or are the recent people-oriented land and
forest-related legislations introduced by the state mere window-dressing
and hence India will continue on a neoliberal path of untrammelled capital
accumulation and its attendant outcomes of rising inequality and marginal
decline in poverty?



We invite scholars from India and abroad to submit proposals, which cover
some facet of the land question in India. For India-based participants
selected for the conference we will provide roundtrip economy class airfare
and lodging and boarding for the duration of the conference. To our
international invitees we will provide accommodation and meals but we
encourage international scholars to seek travel funding of their own as we
expect to be able to provide only partial travel support.



Those interested in participating must provide a title, 750-1,000 word
abstract, contact email address, and a one-page CV with a list of recent
publications by 8th December 2013. Please send your proposals to:



Mritiunjoy Mohanty [log in to unmask]



and cc to Achin Chakraborty [log in to unmask]

and Anthony D’Costa [log in to unmask]





*Last date for abstract submission: 8th December 2013*



Acceptance decision: 15th December 2013



Full paper submission: 15th February 2014

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