ABSTRACT

Criminal Capital explores the relationship between neoliberalism, criminality and the reshaping of class in modern India. It discusses how the political vocabularies of urban industrial workers reflect the processes by which power is distributed across the region. Based upon field research among a ‘casualised’ workforce in the industrial city of Jamshedpur, the book examines the links between the decline of employment security, and criminality in trade unions, corporations and the state.

The volume compares popular discourses of corruption against the ethnography of local labour politics, business enterprise and debt collection, and shows how corruption and criminality consolidate class power in industrial environments. Using an interdisciplinary ethnographic approach, this study interrogates the relationship between capitalism, corruption, violence and labour politics in contemporary Indian society.

An important intervention in the study of Indian political economy, this work will be of interest to scholars and researchers of Indian politics, social anthropology, economics, labour relations and criminology.

part I|55 pages

Class and Capitalism

chapter 1|33 pages

Criminal Capital

part II|45 pages

Power and Enterprise

chapter 4|19 pages

The Decline of Collective Action

part III|50 pages

Division and Change

chapter 6|18 pages

Continuity and the Casualisation of Labour

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion