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999 _c77594
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008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780195678970
082 _a320.5 HAR
100 _aHarriss,John
245 0 _aPower matters: essays on institutions, politics and society in India
260 _aNew Delhi
260 _bOUP
260 _c2006
300 _a314p.
365 _b 595.00
365 _dRS
520 _aQuestions about power in society are obscured by dominant modes of thought in the social sciences. Class relationships-which are relations of power-used to be seen as the motors of change in society. Now, they are often regarded as being much less significant than struggles over identity or nature. Analyses of power and of class relations have been swept aside by the ascendancy in the social sciences of approaches based on the idea of individual rational choice and post-modernist thinking. Going against these current modes of thinking. the essays in this book-which range widely from agriculture to India's big business families, and from economics to politics develop the view that class relations continue to explain a great deal of what happens in societies, Notably, they influence patterns of economic growth and change, the distribution of assets and incomes, and the forms and functioning of political institutions The author argues that it is in the interest of the powerful to paper over the significance of class relationships as happens in the depoliticizing discourse of development. This is also true in currently fashionable uses of ideas like those of 'civil society and 'social capital.
650 _aPolitics and society
942 _cB
_2ddc