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@ -68515,3 +68515,63 @@
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year={2009},
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publisher={Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC}
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}
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@article{archanaagrariansouth,
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author = {Archana Prasad},
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title = {Adivasi Women, Agrarian Change and Forms of Labour
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in Neo-liberal India},
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journal = {Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy},
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volume = 5,
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number = 1,
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pages = {20-49},
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year = 2016,
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URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2277976016665772},
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}
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@article{mcleod1974,
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author = {W H McLeod},
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title = {Ahluwalias and Ramgarhias: Two Sikh castes},
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journal = {South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies},
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volume = 4,
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number = 1,
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pages = {78-90},
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year = 1974,
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doi = {10.1080/00856407408730689},
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URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00856407408730689},
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}
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@article{martin2009,
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author = {Nicolas Martin},
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title = {The political economy of bonded labour in the
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Pakistani Punjab},
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journal = {Contributions to Indian Sociology},
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volume = 43,
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number = 1,
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pages = {35-59},
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year = 2009,
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doi = {10.1177/006996670904300102},
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abstract = { This article examines economic and social relations
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in order to understand political assertion and
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mobilisation among rural bonded labourers in the
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Pakistan Punjab. Bonded labour, characterised by
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economic and extra-economic forms of
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compulsion together with vertical ties of patronage,
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remains widespread in the region. I propose that the
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perpetuation of these relations is largely explained
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by the capture of state institutions by a
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traditional landlord elite and its monopoly over the
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means of coercion coupled with a highly seasonal
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demand for labour. I examine how employment and
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indebtedness combine to restrict workers'
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physical and economic mobility. I argue that
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labourers have not been able to unite politically as
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a class and challenge their employers because years
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of authoritarian rule in Pakistan have entrenched a
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highly factional style of politics dominated by the
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landed elites. My article contributes to the
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literature on agrarian change, class formation and
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the state in south Asia. }
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}
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