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1

Tivārī, Pūnama. Parivahana nīti evaṃ praśāsana. Jayapura: Gautama Buka Kampanī, 2005.

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2

Tivārī, Pūnama. Parivahana nīti evaṃ praśāsana. Jayapura: Gautama Buka Kampanī, 2010.

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Tivārī, Pūnama. Parivahana nīti evaṃ praśāsana. Jayapura: Gautama Buka Kampanī, 2005.

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4

Sogani, Meena. State-level personnel administration in India: A case study of Rajasthan. Jaipur, India: Printwell Publishers, 1987.

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5

Nath, Shyam. Measuring tax burden in India: A case study of Rajasthan State. New Delhi: Ashish Pub. House, 1987.

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6

Sogani, Meena. State-level personnel administration in India: A case study of Rajasthan. Jaipur, India: Printwell Publishers, 1987.

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7

State level plan administration in India: With particular reference to Rajasthan. Jaipur: RBSA Publishers, 1985.

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8

Tivārī, Pūnama. Parivahana nīti evaṃ praśāsana. Jayapura: Gautama Buka Kampanī, 2010.

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9

Batra, Satish K. Public accountability of state enterprises in India: With special reference to Rajasthan. New Delhi: Associated Pub. House, 1992.

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10

Analysis of Rajasthan state assembly election results: Rājasthāna rājya vidhānasabhā cunāva pariṇāmoṃ kā viśāleshaṇa, 2008-2013. New Delhi: Datanet India, 2014.

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11

Jain, Ravi K. Working capital management of state enterprises in India: A case study of state enterprises in Rajasthan. Jaipur: National Pub. House, 1988.

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12

B, Mangla P., and Indian Library Association, eds. Building library collections and national policy for library and information services: Seminar papers, thirtieth All India Library Conference, Rajasthan University, Jaipur, January 28-31, 1985. Delhi: Indian Library Association, 1985.

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13

Jain, S. C. Law relating to essential commodities in Rajasthan: Containing Essential Commodities Act, 1955, orders issued by the central and state governments, with short notes, up-to-date amendments, notifications & latest case law. 8th ed. Jaipur: Gyan Prakashan, 2008.

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14

Tod, James. Annals and antiquities of Rajasthan: Or, The central and western Rajpoot states of India. 2nd ed. New Delhi: Asian Education Services, 2001.

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15

Annals and antiquities of Rajasthan, or, the Central and Western Rajpoot states of India. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers, 2001.

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16

Sakhuja, Anjali. Need assessment of adolescents in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan states of India: A report. New Delhi: MAMTA-Health Institute for Mother and Child, 2005.

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17

Graverol, Gaïl De. The relationship between caste and tribes in a former kingdom of Rajasthan kingship and tribal sovereignty: The case study of the Minas in the ancient princely state of Amber. Jaipur: Institute of Development Studies, 2003.

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18

Puri, Shashi Lata. Legislative Elite in an Indian State. Abhinav Publications,India, 2003.

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19

Yadav, S. L. Agricultural Planning in India: Study of Rajasthan State. Scientific Publishers,India, 2003.

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20

Sisson, Richard. Congress Party in Rajasthan: Political Integration and Institution-Building in an Indian State. University of California Press, 2021.

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21

Sisson, Richard. Congress Party in Rajasthan: Political Integration and Institution-Building in an Indian State. University of California Press, 2021.

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22

Parker, Philip M. The 2006 Economic and Product Market Databook for Rajasthan State, India. ICON Group International, Inc., 2006.

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23

Nath, Shyam. Measuring Tax Burden in India: A Case Study of Rajasthan State. South Asia Books, 1988.

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24

Politics of Patronage and Protest: The State, Society, and Artisans in Early Modern Rajasthan. Oxford University Press, USA, 2006.

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25

Levien, Michael. Genesis of the Land Broker State. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190859152.003.0002.

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This chapter explains why the shift from state developmentalism to neoliberalism in India transformed the Rajasthan state government into a land broker state. During the developmentalist period, the state had largely dispossessed land for public-sector industrial and infrastructural projects that reflected the social commitments of Nehruvian planning. But as economic liberalization created new private demand for rural land from the 1990s onward, the pressure of inter-state competition and the lure of licit and illicit rents incentivized the government to begin dispossessing land for any private purpose representing “growth,” including real estate development, regardless of its broader developmental consequences. This neoliberal regime of dispossession culminated in the mid-2000s with Special Economic Zones (SEZs). While SEZs were facing “land wars” across India, the Rajasthan government sought to avoid opposition by giving farmers a stake in the resulting real estate speculation: a shift in mechanisms of compliance that would be highly consequential.
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26

Levien, Michael. Rajpura. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190859152.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the pre-SEZ agrarian milieu of Rajpura, the study’s main fieldsite. On the eve of its dispossession, Rajpura was a monsoon-dependent agricultural and livestock-rearing village in which many farmers were already partially diversified from agriculture. Sharp class, caste, and gender inequalities reflected the failures of the postcolonial Indian state to effectively redistribute land, invest in education and social welfare, and tackle entrenched forms of social domination that characterized pre-independence rural Rajasthan. Unlike some parts of India, the village had little political history of peasant rebellion. These three factors would help the Rajasthan government produce compliance to dispossession in Rajpura, and would affect the ability of farmers to benefit from the economic changes unleashed by the Mahindra World City.
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27

Levien, Michael. Dispossession without Development. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190859152.001.0001.

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Since the mid-2000s, India has been beset by widespread farmer protests against “land grabs.” Dispossession without Development argues that beneath these conflicts lay a profound transformation in the political economy of land dispossession. While the Indian state dispossessed land for public-sector industry and infrastructure for much of the 20th century, the adoption of neoliberal economic policies since the early 1990s prompted India’s state governments to become land brokers for private real estate capital—most controversially, for Special Economic Zones (SEZs). Using long-term ethnographic research, the book demonstrates the consequences of this new regime of dispossession for a village in Rajasthan. Taking us into the diverse lives of villagers dispossessed for one of North India’s largest SEZs, it shows how the SEZ destroyed their agricultural livelihoods, marginalized their labor, and excluded them from “world-class” infrastructure—but absorbed them into a dramatic real estate boom. Real estate speculation generated a class of rural neo-rentiers, but excluded many and compounded pre-existing class, caste, and gender inequalities. While the SEZ disappointed most villagers’ expectations of “development,” land speculation fractured the village and disabled collective action. The case of “Rajpura” helps to illuminate the exclusionary trajectory of capitalism that underlay land conflicts in contemporary India—and explain why the Indian state is struggling to pacify farmers with real estate payouts. Using the extended case method, Dispossession without Development advances a sociological theory of dispossession that has relevance beyond India.
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28

Krishna, Anirudh. Missing Links in the Institutional Chain. Edited by Carol Lancaster and Nicolas van de Walle. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199845156.013.6.

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This article examines how the chain of institutions that links individuals and communities with the state and with markets helps promote economic development and democracy. It argues that strengthening institutional chains with links at the grassroots, or local, level, such as school boards and parent-teacher associations, district offices of congressmen or political parties, or neighborhood councils, would help citizens diminish the power of local oligarchies, make ruling elites more accountable, and do something about indifferent bureaucrats. Citing the case of Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh in India, the article illustrates how human capabilities and individual agency can help communities close the existing institutional gaps by effectively utilizing collective resources in the service of democracy and development. It shows that economic development is possible through democratic participation and by connecting social capital with programs of the state and with market-based opportunities.
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29

Nandshankar, Mehta Markand, and Mehta Manu Nandshankar, eds. The Hind Rajasthan, or, The annals of the native states of India. New Delhi: Usha, 1985.

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30

Jenkins, Rob, and James Manor. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190608309.003.0001.

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This chapter provides an overview of the book's analytical focus, conceptual approach, main arguments, and research process. It introduces the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act 2005 (NREGA), which was part of a raft of rights-based development legislation passed by the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) that governed India from 2004-2014. NREGA was central to the Indian state's efforts to upgrade the country's relatively thin social welfare provision to something more in keeping with its growing economic and political profile. Six central contentions are outlined, each with a brief explanation. The chapter also justifies the book's approach to concepts such as institutions, poverty, and politics, and introduces the components of what the authors call “political capacity”. Elements of the research process – including information on the key case study states of Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh – are also discussed, and the organization of the remainder of the book, including a chapter outline, is presented.
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31

Annals & Antiquities of Rajasthan,or the Central & Western Rajpoot States of India - 2 vol's. Trans-Atl, 1994.

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32

Tod, James. Annals and Antiquities of Rajast'han, or the Central and Western Rajpoot State of India. HardPress, 2020.

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