Democracy against Development: Lower-Caste Politics and Political Modernity in Postcolonial India
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Witsoe looks at the history of colonialism in India and its role in both shaping modern caste identities and linking locally powerful caste groups to state institutions, which has effectively created a postcolonial patronage state. He then looks at the rise of lower-caste politics in one of India’s poorest and most populous states, Bihar, showing how this increase in democratic participation has radically threatened the patronage state by systematically weakening its institutions and disrupting its development projects. By depicting democracy and development as they truly are in India—in tension—Witsoe reveals crucial new empirical and theoretical insights about the long-term trajectory of democratization in the larger postcolonial world.
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Democracy against Development - Jeffrey Witsoe
JEFFREY WITSOE is assistant professor of anthropology at Union College in Schenectady, NY.
The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637
The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London
© 2013 by The University of Chicago
All rights reserved. Published 2013.
Printed in the United States of America
22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 1 2 3 4 5
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-06316-4 (cloth)
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-06347-8 (paper)
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-06350-8 (e-book)
DOI: 10.7208/chicago/9780226063508.001.0001
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Witsoe, Jeffrey, author.
Democracy against development : lower-caste politics and political modernity in postcolonial India / Jeffrey Witsoe.
pages cm. — (South Asia across the disciplines)
ISBN 978-0-226-06316-4 (cloth : alkaline paper) — ISBN 978-0-226-06347-8 (paperback : alkaline paper) — ISBN 978-0-226-06350-8 (e-book) 1. Caste—Political aspects—India—Bihar. 2. Bihar (India)—Politics and government. I. Title. II. Series: South Asia across the disciplines.
DS422.C3W58 2013
305.5'60954123—dc23
2013008859
This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).
Democracy against Development
Lower-Caste Politics and Political Modernity in Postcolonial India
JEFFREY WITSOE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
CHICAGO AND LONDON
South Asia Across the Disciplines
Edited by Muzaffar Alam, Robert Goldman, and Gauri Viswanathan
Dipesh Chakrabarty, Sheldon Pollock, and Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Founding Editors
Funded by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and jointly published by the University of California Press, the University of Chicago Press, and Columbia University Press.
Also in the series:
THE POWERFUL EPHEMERAL: EVERYDAY HEALING IN AN AMBIGUOUSLY ISLAMIC PLACE by Carla Bellamy (California)
EXTREME POETRY: THE SOUTH ASIAN MOVEMENT OF SIMULTANEOUS NARRATION by Yigal Bronner (Columbia)
BODY OF VICTIM, BODY OF WARRIOR: REFUGEE FAMILIES AND THE MAKING OF KASHMIRI JIHADISTS by Cabeiri deBergh Robinson (California)
CONJUGATIONS: MARRIAGE AND FORM IN NEW BOLLYWOOD CINEMA by Sangita Gopal (Chicago)
CUT-PIECES: CELLULOID OBSCENITY AND POPULAR CINEMA IN BANGLADESH by Lotte Hoek (Columbia)
SECULARIZING ISLAMISTS? JAMA‘AT-E-ISLAMI AND JAMA‘AT-UD-DA‘WA IN URBAN PAKISTAN by Humeira Iqtidar (Chicago)
RECEPTACLE OF THE SACRED: ILLUSTRATED MANUSCRIPTS AND THE BUDDHIST BOOK CULT IN SOUTH ASIA by Jinah Kim (California)
THE SOCIAL SPACE OF LANGUAGE: VERNACULAR CULTURE IN BRITISH COLONIAL PUNJAB by Farina Mir (California)
THE MILLENNIAL SOVEREIGN: SACRED KINGSHIP AND SAINTHOOD IN ISLAM by A. Azfar Moin (Columbia)
UNIFYING HINDUISM: PHILOSOPHY AND IDENTITY IN INDIAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY by Andrew J. Nicholson (Columbia)
FROM TEXT TO TRADITION: THE NAISADHIĪYACARITA AND LITERARY COMMUNITY IN SOUTH ASIA by Deven M. Patel (Columbia)
THE YOGIN AND THE MADMAN: READING THE BIOGRAPHICAL CORPUS OF TIBET’S GREAT SAINT MILAREPA by Andrew Quintman (Columbia)
DOCUMENT RAJ: WRITING AND SCRIBES IN EARLY COLONIAL SOUTH INDIA by Bhavani Raman (Chicago)
ISLAM TRANSLATED: LITERATURE, CONVERSION, AND THE ARABIC COSMOPOLIS OF SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA by Ronit Ricci (Chicago)
UNFINISHED GESTURES: DEVADĀSĪS, MEMORY, AND MODERNITY IN SOUTH INDIA by Davesh Soneji (Chicago)
MAKING SENSE OF TANTRIC BUDDHISM: HISTORY, SEMIOLOGY, AND TRANSGRESSION IN THE INDIAN TRADITIONS by Christian K. Wedemeyer (Columbia)
South Asia Across the Disciplines is a series devoted to publishing first books across a wide range of South Asian studies, including art, history, philology or textual studies, philosophy, religion, and the interpretive social sciences. Series authors all share the goal of opening up new archives and suggesting new methods and approaches, while demonstrating that South Asian scholarship can be at once deep in expertise and broad in appeal.
To Tara
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Democracy and the Politics of Caste
CHAPTER 1. State Formation, Caste Formation, and the Emergence of a Lower-Caste Politics
CHAPTER 2. Lalu Yadav’s Bihar: An Incomplete Revolution
CHAPTER 3. Caste in the State: Division and Conflict within the Bihar Government
CHAPTER 4. Caste, Regional Politics, and Territoriality
CHAPTER 5. A Multiple Village: Caste Divisions, Democratic Practice, and Territorialities
CHAPTER 6. A Multiple Caste: Intra-caste Divisions and the Contradictions of Development
CHAPTER 7. The Fall of Lalu Yadav and the Meaning of Lower-Caste Politics
Notes
Reference List
Index
Acknowledgments
I must begin by thanking my many friends in Bihar, whose extraordinary hospitality made this research both possible and enjoyable. First and foremost, Shri P. K. Thakur, Shrimati Usha Thakur, and Sachin Shankar Thakur, without whom this work would not have even begun. I want to specially thank all of the residents of Rajnagar
for their very warm hospitality and stimulating conversation over the years, and especially my host Jafar and his family. Sanjay Singh also provided generous hospitality. In Patna, Akhilesh Kumar’s tireless assistance and dedication to research contributed substantially to this work. The Ghosh family provided warm hospitality and friendship. The Asian Development Research Institute (ADRI) has continued to be my intellectual home in Patna. I thank everyone at ADRI, P. P. Ghosh, and especially Shaibal Gupta, who taught me a great deal of what I know about politics in Bihar. I benefited from many discussions with Manoj Shrivastava in Bihar and London and with Shrikant in Patna. There are many other people in Bihar whom I don’t have space to mention. Thank you, all!
The research for this book began at the University of Cambridge. I’d like to give a special acknowledgement to Susan Bayly for her guidance, insightful critique, and continued support. I thank Caroline Humphrey, Marilyn Strathern, and the participants of the writing-up seminar for their helpful feedback. I also thank Mukulika Banerjee for very helpful comments.
The Center for the Advanced Study of India at the University of Pennsylvania provided an ideal intellectual environment for the completion of the later parts of this book. Francine Frankel’s in-depth feedback on several chapters shaped this book in important ways and taught me a great deal about Indian politics. I thank Devesh Kapur for his continued encouragement, support, and intellectual engagement. I also want to thank Atul Kohli for his insightful comments on parts of the book and also Mekhala Krishnamurthy.
John Harriss supported this work from the beginning. F. G. Bailey provided encouragement and wise advice. I thank my colleagues at Union College for supporting the final stages of this project. I would also like to thank the three anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments.
The following funding bodies supported this research, listed in the order received: Gates Scholarship (Gates Cambridge Trust); Smuts Research Award (Smuts Trust); Ling Roth Scholarship (Ling Roth Trust); a grant from Clare Hall, Cambridge; funding from the Center for the Advanced Study of India; and funding from Union College. Finally, I thank my family and especially my parents for supporting me throughout this remarkable journey.
Introduction
Democracy and the Politics of Caste
A political rally on April 30, 2003, drew tens of thousands of villagers to the sprawling Gandhi Maidan field in the center of Patna, the capital of Bihar, a populous state in the Hindi belt
of north India. The event was called the "laathi rally," as Lalu Prasad Yadav, the charismatic president of the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), then the ruling party in Bihar, called his mostly rural, lower-caste supporters to descend upon Patna bringing with them laathis, long bamboo sticks.¹ The rally’s theme was bhajpa bhagao, desh bachao (get rid of the Bharatiya Janata Party [BJP] [then the leading party of the National Democratic Alliance government in Delhi] and save the country).²
The day of the rally was a breathtakingly chaotic scene, as mobs of activists, with many people carrying laathis, gathered in the capital. The vast majority of people came from villages; many were brought in buses by local leaders eager to show their support for the RJD, and Lalu Yadav in particular.³ On my way to Patna to attend the rally, supporters desperate for free passage besieged my train at every station. Windows were smashed, and passengers were thrown out of their seats as masses of villagers flooded the coaches. The incoming traffic into Patna was so great that outgoing car traffic was stopped for two days to allow the massive influx to reach the capital unimpeded. Patna was completely overrun. Most shopkeepers closed their doors for fear of looting; hordes of wandering, laathi-wielding rallygoers blocked traffic; college students were thrown out of their hostels and their rooms occupied; and Gandhi Maidan was a sea of people, laathis in hand.⁴
The laathi was endowed with a multifaceted political symbolism reflecting the RJD’s political project. The laathi is a quintessentially rural implement used for cow and buffalo herding, carrying an additional reference to Gandhi’s walking staff.⁵ "The so-called modern people have ridiculed and treated with contempt such weapons of the downtrodden as laathi," Lalu Yadav said before the rally.⁶ The massive presence of this simple tool was an image of villagers temporarily overtaking the urban capital, demonstrating where the real source of political power in Bihar was now located.
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad, an extreme Hindu nationalist organization, had been distributing trishals—a three-pronged ritual implement with strong Hindu symbolic association—at their rallies, and Lalu Yadav declared in his speech that the laathi would destroy such "trishals of hatred." Supporters were told to strengthen their laathis by applying oil and reciting the slogan laathi piyavan, patna lavan, bhajpa hatavan, desh bachavan (we will oil our laathis, bring them to Patna, remove the BJP, and save the country), emphasizing a symbolic militancy directed against Hindu nationalism.⁷
The laathi is also a favored instrument of the police, who employ "laathi charges" in order to disperse riotous crowds. During the laathi rally, however, the crowds were themselves armed with laathis, mocking the police who watched from a safe distance, visibly uncomfortable. By using the laathi in such a provocative manner, the RJD activists were effectively saying, We are the state.
⁸
The laathi rally highlighted a long-standing tension in India between a politics of agitation and mass participation that emerged during the nationalist movement and a national project of development emphasizing public order and discipline that predominated in the decades after independence (Chakrabarty 2007). A debate in the Indian media about the desirability of huge rallies followed the Patna event. If the symbolism and participatory composition of the laathi rally itself told the story of Lalu Yadav’s RJD, the critique of the rally characterized its opposition. The debate pitted the caste empowerment and political participation that the rally expressed against the chaos and disruption to Patna’s urban population, as well as the cost of such an endeavor.⁹ To draw supporters, many state legislators had arranged wild and expensive parties, some even bringing entertainers and dancing girls
from Bombay. For the national media and Patna’s middle-class residents, the laathi rally was an example of how excessive politicization
had destabilized Bihar, halting development and creating lawlessness—politicians’ preoccupation with such theatrical displays being the explanation for the lack of attention to administration and a more constructive issue-based politics.
Indeed, during the period of RJD rule, Bihar was widely considered to be the worst-governed state in India. For part of this period (1997 and 1998), Lalu Yadav was in prison on corruption charges, continuing to effectively rule the state by cell phone after his wife was installed as chief minister. At the same time, criminality exploded, including a large and lucrative kidnapping industry. Between 1992 and 2005, thirty thousand kidnappings for ransom were reported.¹⁰ Yet even with the Bihar government’s dismal performance on so many fronts, Lalu Yadav, and later his wife, Rabri Devi, served as the chief ministers of three consecutive state governments in 1990, 1995, and 2000, a remarkable achievement in India where governments are routinely voted out of power for poor performance (referred to in India as the anti-incumbency factor
). How did the RJD manage to stay in power for so long?
The RJD government’s widespread support, despite its extreme and very visible shortcomings, reveals the centrality that a politics of lower-caste empowerment came to occupy within Bihar’s political world. Issues concerning development, or even law and order,
were marginalized as demands for caste-based social justice
took prominence. For the RJD’s lower-caste supporters the laathi rally justified itself, serving as a practical affirmation that they had captured the state and were now in power. And they considered this to be the true aim of democratic politics.
Postcolonial Democracy
In this book, I examine lower-caste politics in Bihar, combining a historical analysis of the colonial and postcolonial roots of the politics of caste with an ethnographic account based on more than three years of fieldwork, which documents the operations of lower-caste politics at multiple levels—in the village, in regional sites, and in the often violent political world of the state capital. This multisited approach allows me to draw connections between contexts—the village with larger networks of actors, contemporary political practice with longer histories, and the drama of state-level party politics with everyday struggles within local sites. In doing so, I build on previous anthropological studies on the relationship between caste and democracy.¹¹ Whereas these studies have taught us a great deal about the ways in which democracy has impacted the experience of caste within village contexts (especially in the two decades after independence) and the role of late colonialism and postcolonial democracy in shaping modern caste identities, there has been much less work in the opposite direction, that is, explorations of the ways in which the politics of caste has shaped India’s democracy. This is especially true for the lower-caste politics that emerged with force during the 1990s.
My examination of the role of caste in shaping India’s political modernity provides a framework for understanding many of the dynamics of the world’s largest democracy
that, I suggest, is also relevant for understanding democratization in postcolonial contexts more generally. This is an especially important enterprise considering that accompanying the global expansion of democracy today are secular economic and geopolitical shifts that are likely resulting in a decline of American and European global dominance. If this global shift means that Europe and the United States are in the process of being provincialized
(Chakrabarty 1999, Knauft 2007), then the Euro-American model of liberal democracy may also be undergoing such a process. This decline of the West,
combined with the growing awareness that democracy in much of the world is not playing out according to liberal assumptions, means that we should seriously explore alternative ways for understanding democracy in the twenty-first century that go beyond the liberal democratic framework.
India is arguably the most important and instructive case of postcolonial democracy today because of its sheer size and growing global clout, but also because of its distinct democratic experience. India’s democracy has proven remarkably resilient, especially compared with other parts of the postcolonial world (Kohli 2001). This is despite India’s being perhaps the least likely place for democracy to take root according to standard democratic theory, which has regarded India as an extremely large exception.
At the time of independence, India had a small middle class, a dizzyingly heterogeneous mix of linguistic, religious, and caste-based identities, low levels of basic education, and pervasive poverty. But despite predictions of democratic collapse, regular elections have been held,¹² monitored by an independent election commission and often resulting in unexpected outcomes that are nevertheless followed by peaceful transitions. India has a civilian-controlled military that does not politically interfere, and, perhaps most important, and in stark contrast to Western democracies, participation among historically oppressed groups has steadily increased (Yadav 1997). Unlike the regime transitions and periodic, and often partial, experiments with democracy that have occurred in many other parts of the postcolonial world, India has experienced six decades of electoral democracy, providing the temporal continuity for democratic practices to become deeply engrained in everyday life. Consequently, few people in India today think of democracy as an import. And because most new democracies are now in the postcolonial world, and most citizens living in democracies are located in postcolonial countries, India offers important lessons for understanding the present and future of democracy in much of the world.
Liberal democracy
combines a liberalism based on individual rights with a much older and subversive concept of democracy as rule of the people
that in fact represents a contingent historical articulation
(Mouffe 1993, 2–3).¹³ And as the political theorist Ernesto Laclau (2005, 167) observes, Once the articulation between liberalism and democracy is considered as merely contingent . . . other contingent articulations are possible, so that there are forms of democracy outside the liberal symbolic framework.
Recent anthropological research has richly documented the variations of democracy in different contexts.¹⁴ Indian realities have shaped democracy, resulting in distinct forms of democratic experience. As Micheluti (2008) demonstrates, democracy in India has been indigenized
in relation to caste, with members of the Yadav caste, for instance, viewing themselves as a caste of politicians,
and their patron deity Krishna as the originator of democracy.
To explain the drivers of democratic difference in India, I emphasize the importance of processes of state formation in shaping political culture (Corrigan and Sayer 1985, Joseph and Nugent 1994). David Nugent (2008), in an insightful examination of democracy in the Chachapoyas region of Peru, shows how processes of state formation that differ greatly from those that produced Western European democracies produced an alternate
democracy. He demonstrates that examining divergent processes of state formation serves as a powerful window into understanding historically conditioned democratic difference.
Building on this work, I argue that the specificities of colonialism need to be given prominence. If, as Nugent suggests, divergent processes of state formation have resulted in the emergence of alternate
democracies, we would expect histories of colonial rule to produce distinct democratic trajectories because the colonial project entailed the construction of very particular types of state institutions, political alliances, and forms of knowledge. Postcolonial democracies, therefore, require different frameworks of analysis—they cannot be situated along a temporal, developmental trajectory, as advanced
versus emerging
democracies or even as transitional
democracies, where the implied transition is to the liberal variety (see Chatterjee 2011, 21–26). But it is also important not to push the idea of culturally driven democratic difference too far—the flawed idea of democracy as an unfolding universal should not be replaced with a cultural relativist vision of India as its own incommensurate democratic universe (even if it may seem such at times). It is instructive here to consider Fredric Jameson’s (2002) critique of the notion of alternate modernities
as obfuscating the subaltern positions produced by global capitalism by suggesting that everyone can have their own modernity.
Not only are democratic ideas and institutions appropriated and deployed in culturally specific ways, but, as I shall demonstrate, democratic possibilities are shaped by colonial encounters and their aftermath, encounters that often introduced these concepts and institutions in the first place. And if, as I argue, processes of state formation are the key to understanding democratic difference (Nugent 2008) and, as Wallerstein (1974, 402–403) has pointed out, these processes can be shown to at least partly reflect relative positioning within the world system,
then the operations of global capitalism also inevitably shape democratic difference. India’s postindependence regime of import-substituting industrialization produced very different democratic possibilities than the era of structural adjustment and liberalization from 1991, and India’s growing global clout in the twenty-first century is likely resulting in new democratic potentials (and limitations).
This does not, of course, imply that all postcolonial democracies are the same, or even that regions within India are the same; each is shaped by the interaction between specific colonial regimes, longer histories that predate colonialism, the particular dynamics of independence movements, and the contingencies of postcolonial political economy (Sivaramakrishnan and Agrawal 2003), but in each case contemporary democracies that experienced colonial domination may be meaningfully described as postcolonial.
Partha Chatterjee (2004, 36–37) emphasizes the impact of colonial processes of state formation on Indian democracy, noting that formal citizenship based on popular sovereignty came a century and a half after the classification, description, and enumeration of population groups had been established by a powerful administrative apparatus that continued, and even expanded, after independence in the name of a national project of development. This leads Chatterjee (2004, 2011) to describe postcolonial democracy as a politics of the governed,
contrasting what he calls political society
with an elite-inhabited civil society
composed of the formal legal-constitutional structure of which every citizen is in theory a member but that he argues is quite different from the realities of political life in postcolonial contexts. Political society
operates in the interstices of governmentality, with subaltern groups manipulating governmental practices and categorizations, often in disregard of the formal legal system, to gain access to development resources and secure their often precarious positions. For instance, while movements of largely middle-class activists seeking to bridge this divide resulted in rights-based legislation in recent years endowing every Indian citizen with the right to work (2005), access to information (2005), education (2009), and food (2012), in practice these rights still often have to be secured through negotiation and struggle within political society (Harriss 2011). If civil society
refers to the abstract ideals of liberal citizenship, then, in practice the heterogeneity of political society
is where these ideals are actualized, or subverted, according to everyday political struggle.
I find Chatterjee’s formulation to be a useful way to destabilize liberal assumptions, emphasizing the ways in which everyday political life in India—or, as Chatterjee puts it, most of the world
—diverges from the liberal democratic normative framework, compelling us to redefine the normative standards of modern politics in the light of the considerable accumulation of new practices that may at the present only be described in the language of exceptions but which in fact contain the core of a richer, more diverse, and inclusive set of norms
(Chatterjee 2011, 22). But Chatterjee’s political society
remains a passive category—it is a politics of the governed
with similarities to older models of clientalism (see below). As Chatterjee (2011, 148) puts it, Political society does not offer a transformational narrative threatening the course of capitalist development. It is not a concept of revolutionary politics.
I will argue, in contrast, for the need to politicize the concept of political society,
in the sense of recognizing the potential of postcolonial democracy to be an active agent. And in Bihar, democracy did come into direct conflict with capitalist development, not just through dramatic events like the laathi rally, but through the very types of everyday politics that Chatterjee emphasizes (Chatterjee 2011, 149).
The recognition that democracy emerges in specific forms in postcolonial contexts, therefore, has to go beyond an emphasis on the constraints that this imposes. A positive theorization of postcolonial democracy is needed; therefore, my analysis has two parts—an elaboration of the ways in which colonial and postcolonial processes of state formation have shaped the context within which democracy plays out, and an examination of the ways in which democracy, as idea and practice, has transformed this context over time. Although India’s postcolonial status has shaped the dynamics of Indian democracy, democratization is simultaneously transforming India’s postcolonial context. In the following section, I outline the ways in which my analysis differs from conventional explanations of caste politics, which will delineate some of the advantages of this approach.
Understanding Lower-Caste Politics
Lower-caste politics is usually explained in two ways, both of which, I suggest, are insufficient. Endless editorializing in the Indian national media treats caste politics as the product of the polluting influence of irrational identities seen as vestiges of tradition and backwardness
that reflect widespread illiteracy, ignorance, and political immaturity. But as this study and many others make abundantly clear, caste as political identity is a thoroughly modern phenomenon, shaped by colonialism, the postcolonial state, and democratic practice.
More sophisticated academic analyses have usually interpreted the rise of caste-based political mobilizations to be an interest-driven politics seeking access to the economic resources of an expansive public sector. Bardhan (2001, 233) writes, As the expansion of the public sector over the years created more opportunities for secure jobs and, not infrequently, for the associated extra elicit income if the job is in some regulatory capacity, more and more mobilized groups in the democratic process have started using their low-caste status for making a claim to the loot.
Brass (1990,19–20) situates caste politics as part of an all-pervasive instrumentalism which washes away party manifestos, rhetoric, and effective implementation of policies in an unending competition for power, status, and profit. . . . India has adopted the model of the state which exists for its own sake.
¹⁵ In a similar vein, Chandra (2004) terms democracy in India as a patronage democracy
wherein politicians use their discretionary control over state resources to trade votes for development resources through caste-based vote blocks.
Chhibber (1999) argues that, in the context of an activist state
and the absence of strong associational life,
electoral strategy and competition explain the emergence of caste-based parties in India. Although these are, of course, very different works, they all suggest that the centrality of caste in Indian political life results from interest-oriented politicians or voters seeking control over an expansive state.¹⁶
The works cited above certainly do capture important aspects of Indian political life, but we have to ask whether there is more to the politics of lower-caste empowerment than political manipulation and looting the state.
In fact, just as neoliberal reform began to shrink the public sector after 1991, the rise of lower-caste politics intensified. By the early 1990s, Congress one-party rule had ended amid a proliferation of caste and ethnicity-based regional parties (Corbridge and Harriss 2000). In stark contrast with many liberal democracies, in which the poor and marginalized are less likely to vote, popular participation in the electoral process surged in north India during the late 1980s, especially among people from lower-caste backgrounds as well as among those in rural areas—a phenomenon that Yogendra Yadav (2000) has termed the second democratic upsurge.
¹⁷ This upsurge in lower-caste voting turnout coincided with a progressive increase in the number of members of state legislative assemblies and members of the national parliament from lower-caste backgrounds. A political watershed occurred when V. P. Singh (prime minister under the National Front government that was elected in 1989—then only the second non-Congress government in Delhi since independence) decided to implement the recommendations of the Mandal Commission. This commission, headed by B. P. Mandal, former chief minister of Bihar, recommended reserving a portion of central government employment for what the Indian Constitution designates as Other Backward Classes
(OBCs), an intentionally broad category that includes lower castes that did not suffer from a history of untouchablity. (The constitution has mandated employment reservations for the latter, as well as for the Scheduled Tribes,
since 1950.) This policy implementation had an explosive political impact marked by violent protests, including a number of self-immolations by upper-caste students, as well as an ensuing upsurge of lower-caste political mobilization.¹⁸ By the mid-1990s, OBC politicians dominated the state assemblies in north India, especially in what were then the two most populous states, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.¹⁹
Jaffrelot (2003) has gone so far as to refer to this upsurge of lower-caste politics—following V. P. Singh’s apt expression—as a silent revolution
in north India.²⁰ Likewise, Hansen (1999) argues for the need to adopt a radical Tocquevillian framework
in order to understand recent democratic experience in India.²¹ If these scholars have suggested that something revolutionary has taken place, the actual dynamics of this process have remained something of a mystery, which is perhaps why the more radical aspects of lower-caste politics have not adequately informed recent theorization of Indian democracy. This is all the more striking considering that prominent earlier work, such as Rajni Kothari’s (1970) Caste in Indian Politics and the Rudolphs’ (1967) The Modernity of Tradition, demonstrated the ways in which caste identities became the basis for new relationships between recently enfranchised voters and an independent, democratic Indian state that, particularly for Kothari, had clearly radical implications.
Throughout this book, I seek to demonstrate that democracy in Bihar operates according to dynamics that cannot be understood by focusing either on abstract identities (detached from structures of power) or the abstract interests of individual voters, politicians, or parties. Rather, I argue that we need to take account of processes of state formation that produced structures of power and identity (the two being linked) within which a caste-based politics made sense to most people. I show the ways in which colonial and then postcolonial strategies of governance resulted in the emergence of caste networks that continue to link state institutions with locally powerful groups, producing a state unable to impartially deliver services or enforce individual rights. This is the crucial context within which the instrumentality and corruption often associated with caste politics play out. But I also illustrate the ways in which lower-caste politics challenged this mode of governance, not by attempting to reform a corrupt system,
but by systematically weakening state institutions and development activities controlled by upper castes and, when possible, by openly and unapologetically using corrupt practices to turn the tables on upper castes that had long done the same more discreetly (disguised with the rhetoric of development). The result was a political movement positioned against development.
The next section briefly sketches my framework for understanding lower-caste politics and the implications that follow for understanding India’s democracy.
Lower-Caste Politics and India’s Postcolonial Democracy
The legacy of colonialism has shaped the contemporary experience of democracy in crucial ways, which is very clear in the case of the politics of caste.²² A substantial body of literature has explored the ways in which colonial strategies of governance shaped caste identities. The Raj utilized caste