This article explores 'statehood' and argues Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation was not a state like contemporary Sumer and Egypt were, despite being equally complex - hence calling for revision of the unilineal anthropological model culminating in the state
Tribes and State Formation is the first effort to bring together the disciplines of history, anthrop...
This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in n...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...
This article explores 'statehood' and argues Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation was not a state li...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
AbstractThe cities of the Indus civilization were expansive and planned with large-scale architectur...
In most historical literature the conceptual 'state' has become a yardstick for measuring the degree...
One of the Indus Civilization’s most striking features is its cultural uniformity evidenced by a com...
It is recognized widely enough that a pre-state society in order to get transformed into a state mus...
The Indus Civilization, otherwise called Harappan or Indus-Sarasvati, is one of the world’s earliest...
Since the mid-eighteenth century when armies serving the English East India Company (EIC) clashed wi...
This article poses the problem to what extent the emergence of the state was inevitable. According t...
This article explores the impact of the police action and the anti-communist struggle in Hyderabad o...
Political science is concerned with the study of polities. However, remarkably few scholars are fami...
In this thesis I present an anthropological history of a remote and little-known area of India, the ...
Tribes and State Formation is the first effort to bring together the disciplines of history, anthrop...
This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in n...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...
This article explores 'statehood' and argues Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation was not a state li...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
AbstractThe cities of the Indus civilization were expansive and planned with large-scale architectur...
In most historical literature the conceptual 'state' has become a yardstick for measuring the degree...
One of the Indus Civilization’s most striking features is its cultural uniformity evidenced by a com...
It is recognized widely enough that a pre-state society in order to get transformed into a state mus...
The Indus Civilization, otherwise called Harappan or Indus-Sarasvati, is one of the world’s earliest...
Since the mid-eighteenth century when armies serving the English East India Company (EIC) clashed wi...
This article poses the problem to what extent the emergence of the state was inevitable. According t...
This article explores the impact of the police action and the anti-communist struggle in Hyderabad o...
Political science is concerned with the study of polities. However, remarkably few scholars are fami...
In this thesis I present an anthropological history of a remote and little-known area of India, the ...
Tribes and State Formation is the first effort to bring together the disciplines of history, anthrop...
This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in n...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...