ABSTRACT

This book explores the relationship between the production of new urban spaces and illiberal community-making in contemporary India. It is based on an ethnographic study in Noida, a city at the eastern fringe of the state of Uttar Pradesh, bordering national capital Delhi.

The book demonstrates a flexible planning approach being central to the entrepreneurial turn in India’s post-liberalisation urbanisation, whereby a small-scale industrial township is transformed into a real-estate driven modern city. Its real point of departure, however, is in the argument that this turn can enable a form of illiberal community-making in new cities that are quite different from older metropolises. Exclusivist forms of solidarity and symbolic boundary construction - stemming from the differences across communities as well as their internal heterogeneities - form the crux of this process, which is examined in three distinct but often interspersed socio-spatial forms: planned middle-class residential quarters, ‘urban villages’ and migrant squatter colonies.

The book combines radical geographical conceptualisations of social production of space and neoliberal urbanism with sociological and anthropological approaches to urban community-making. It will be of interest to researchers in development studies, sociology, urban studies, as well as readers interested in society and politics of contemporary India/South Asia.

chapter |16 pages

Prologue

chapter 1|43 pages

Urban Space, Community-making and Illiberal Politics

A Theoretical Framework

chapter 2|44 pages

Producing a New Urban Space

City-making in Noida

chapter 3|62 pages

Fractured Secessions

Urban Sector Communities

chapter 4|36 pages

Recreating a Nativist Rural

Communities in Urban Villages

chapter 5|38 pages

The ‘Tainted Others’

Jhuggi Jhopdi Communities

chapter 6|14 pages

Conclusion