ABSTRACT

This book presents the raging debate on one of the most brutal political realities that India has confronted in recent years: the rising conflict between Maoist insurgent groups and the Indian State. With some of the finest writings on the subject, it brings together articles and interviews from leading authors, politicians, journalists, intellectuals, filmmakers and legal practitioners. The volume straddles between two apparently irreconcilable perspectives: (a) the view that the Maoist movement threatens the very core of democratic foundations, and should be perceived as a violent law & order situation justifying severe retaliatory measures, and (b) the counterview where Maoists are fiercely defended as revolutionaries and comrades of resistance, and the movement seen as the last-ditch struggle by those who have been abandoned over years by the State in its developmental process.





The essays probe whether armed struggle is avoidable, whether the desperate desire for peace has simply been overtaken by political ideologies, and whether an inclusive developmental State policy may help restore faith in its democratic ethos. The book will be of interest to academics and students of politics, sociology, social anthropology and law. It will also be extremely useful to social workers, policymakers, politicians, bureaucrats, as well as the general reader.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part I|42 pages

Introduction to Maoism

part II|52 pages

Reality and Experiences

chapter 4|4 pages

The State at the Doorstep

chapter 5|3 pages

A Really Dark Corner

chapter 7|3 pages

Here, Silence Speaks Volumes

chapter 8|9 pages

Inside Maoistan

chapter 10|3 pages

Nothing Very Civil About this War

chapter 11|2 pages

The Path Rarely Taken

chapter 12|2 pages

Through an Egyptian Mirror

part IV|79 pages

Possible Solutions

chapter 25|3 pages

The Wrong Diagnosis

chapter 26|3 pages

Force Should be Met with Force

chapter 27|4 pages

Grow Up

chapter 29|3 pages

Maoism is Terrorism

part V|39 pages

Counter-Maoism, Rule of Law and Constitutional Rights

chapter 34|14 pages

Bastar, Maoism and Salwa Judum

chapter 35|7 pages

Salwa Judum Judgement of the Supreme Court

(Decided by B. Sudershan Reddy and Surinder Singh Nijjar, JJ)*