This article explores the postcolonial criminalization of a so-called criminal tribe in the borderlands of East Punjab in the years following independence and Partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947. A small proportion of the Rai Sikhs had been notified by the colonial government under the draconian Criminal Tribes Act (1871), which marked out certain communities as criminal and subjected them to excessive punitive measures. In the years after independence, as the Government of India was dismantling the act, the Rai Sikhs came to be more conclusively aligned with the category of the criminal tribe in the bureaucratic and discursive practices of local state actors. The article contends that this process was no mere colonial legacy but r...
In the aftermath of August 5, 2019, almost the entire population of Indian-held Jammu & Kashmir ...
The tribal India forms a distinct picture of the country. There are about 40 million tribals In Indi...
This article examines the Indian sedition law laid out in Section 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code (I...
On 14-15 August 1947, India obtained freedom from British colonial rule. For the so-called ‘criminal...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
Southern penal spaces are marked by resemblances and affinities with colonial regimes of control, ye...
The wandering groups of India, who were criminalized by the British through the Criminal Tribes Act ...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
This article explores the impact of the police action and the anti-communist struggle in Hyderabad o...
This article seeks to understand the idea of criminal tribes, which was based on British belief abou...
This article was published on the anniversary of India's Republic day in January 2021 for the well-k...
This article utilizes a three-pronged analytical model to examine the mechanics of British coloniali...
This article focuses on unpacking the workings of the independent Indian nation-state in the region ...
Over the last decade there has been increasing scholarly interest in the ethnic character of the Ind...
The tribal India forms a distinct picture of the country. There are about 40 million tribals In Indi...
In the aftermath of August 5, 2019, almost the entire population of Indian-held Jammu & Kashmir ...
The tribal India forms a distinct picture of the country. There are about 40 million tribals In Indi...
This article examines the Indian sedition law laid out in Section 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code (I...
On 14-15 August 1947, India obtained freedom from British colonial rule. For the so-called ‘criminal...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
Southern penal spaces are marked by resemblances and affinities with colonial regimes of control, ye...
The wandering groups of India, who were criminalized by the British through the Criminal Tribes Act ...
This article reports primary archival data on the colonial penal history of British India and its re...
This article explores the impact of the police action and the anti-communist struggle in Hyderabad o...
This article seeks to understand the idea of criminal tribes, which was based on British belief abou...
This article was published on the anniversary of India's Republic day in January 2021 for the well-k...
This article utilizes a three-pronged analytical model to examine the mechanics of British coloniali...
This article focuses on unpacking the workings of the independent Indian nation-state in the region ...
Over the last decade there has been increasing scholarly interest in the ethnic character of the Ind...
The tribal India forms a distinct picture of the country. There are about 40 million tribals In Indi...
In the aftermath of August 5, 2019, almost the entire population of Indian-held Jammu & Kashmir ...
The tribal India forms a distinct picture of the country. There are about 40 million tribals In Indi...
This article examines the Indian sedition law laid out in Section 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code (I...