This article explores a great contradiction in rural land debates in India: on the one hand, explosive political contestation that is often able to halt proposed land acquisition; on the other, an unprecedented urban‐industrial expansion that is appropriating rural land. The authors argue that land grabbing for mining proceeds in an incremental manner, yet its cumulative effect leads to territorial transformation. To investigate this incremental appropriation, a temporal study of the North Karanpura coal mining tract in eastern India was conducted, combining remote sensing, interviews and official land‐use data. The results reveal a cumulative land grab of thousands of hectares from the late 1980s to the present day as open‐cut coal mines s...
A recent panel discussion at LSE highlighted South Asian variations of the global trend of land thef...
After the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh into Telangana and residual Andhra in 2014, the ruling TDP g...
The dominance of coal for Indian energy security might, finally, be about to reduce as increasing de...
This article explores a great contradiction in rural land debates in India: on the one hand, explosi...
Contemporary India is among the top seven countries in the world witnessing the rise of mega urban r...
Indian land markets have been in a state of frenzy. This is largely driven by the economic space pro...
To this day, land is a source of survival for billions of people around the globe. However, industri...
Funding information: The research for and writing of this article were funded through a PhD fellowsh...
This article presents an investigation into strategies employed by privately-owned companies to gain...
India has over the recent decade witnessed a spate of land transfers as Special Economic Zones, extr...
Agricultural dominant societies in India have slowly shifted from traditional agricultural practices...
This article presents an investigation into strategies employed by privately-owned companies to gain...
In India, coal is much more than just a fossil fuel, a mere commodity in the nation�s power supply. ...
Coal mining plays a key role in developing the economic backbone of many developing countries, such ...
This work analyzes resource extraction and development as mutually constitutive logics of rule in In...
A recent panel discussion at LSE highlighted South Asian variations of the global trend of land thef...
After the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh into Telangana and residual Andhra in 2014, the ruling TDP g...
The dominance of coal for Indian energy security might, finally, be about to reduce as increasing de...
This article explores a great contradiction in rural land debates in India: on the one hand, explosi...
Contemporary India is among the top seven countries in the world witnessing the rise of mega urban r...
Indian land markets have been in a state of frenzy. This is largely driven by the economic space pro...
To this day, land is a source of survival for billions of people around the globe. However, industri...
Funding information: The research for and writing of this article were funded through a PhD fellowsh...
This article presents an investigation into strategies employed by privately-owned companies to gain...
India has over the recent decade witnessed a spate of land transfers as Special Economic Zones, extr...
Agricultural dominant societies in India have slowly shifted from traditional agricultural practices...
This article presents an investigation into strategies employed by privately-owned companies to gain...
In India, coal is much more than just a fossil fuel, a mere commodity in the nation�s power supply. ...
Coal mining plays a key role in developing the economic backbone of many developing countries, such ...
This work analyzes resource extraction and development as mutually constitutive logics of rule in In...
A recent panel discussion at LSE highlighted South Asian variations of the global trend of land thef...
After the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh into Telangana and residual Andhra in 2014, the ruling TDP g...
The dominance of coal for Indian energy security might, finally, be about to reduce as increasing de...