Inequality and Elections: The Nationwide Origins and State-Level Dynamics of India's Maoist Insurgency
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-18-2017
Publication Title
Asian Affairs: An American Review
DOI
10.1080/00927678.2017.1357347
ISSN
1940-1590
Abstract
This article investigates the causes of India's Maoist insurgency and its changing dynamics. To explain its origins, we empirically test three hypotheses using cross-state-level data: inequality of wealth in states; inefficient state government; and, disgruntled provocateurs. Our analysis reveals that insurgency is caused by inequality of wealth in states, not inefficient state governments and disgruntled provocateurs. Subsequently, we study variations in the number of Maoist attacks and the selected targets in the eastern Indian state of West Bengal using newspaper reports of events. Our analysis demonstrates that the numbers of incidents and the type of targets selected depend on electoral competition between regional political parties and their interactions with Maoists. The findings, therefore, indicate that whereas inequality of wealth can explain the insurgency's presence in states, political competition within states could explain its dynamics.
Recommended Citation
Banerjee, Vasabjit, Srobana Bhattacharya, Anand Jha.
2017.
"Inequality and Elections: The Nationwide Origins and State-Level Dynamics of India's Maoist Insurgency."
Asian Affairs: An American Review, 44 (3): 72-97: Taylor & Francis Online.
doi: 10.1080/00927678.2017.1357347
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/poli-sci-facpubs/184