The Indian Constitution: Conversations with Power
(English captions & Hindi subtitles available)
(English captions & Hindi subtitles available)
(English captions & Hindi subtitles available)
Rain, rivers, coasts, and seas have shaped our societies from the earliest days. Tales from classical antiquity to the Abrahamic religions to ancient Mesopotamia speak of how water changed the course of history. In India, the “crucible of the monsoon,” the annual drama of the moisture-carrying winds that bring 80 percent of the country’s rainfall between June and September, has long shaped everything from childhood to culture to commerce.
Despite rapid economic growth, declining fertility, and an increase in education of women in India over the past three decades, the female workforce participation (FWFP) rate (proportion of women who are working) in the country continues to remain low. In fact, it has shown a precipitous and persistent decline since 1987. Figure 1 plots the workforce participation rates for women and men aged 25-60 in India’s rural (Panel A) and urban (Panel B) regions from 1987-2017.
Sarath Pillai is the Kenneth Pye Visiting Assistant Professor in South Asian History at Southern Methodist University (SMU) and a CASI Non-Resident Scholar. He is a historian of modern India, focusing on the history of federalism and Indian princely states. His first monograph, tentatively titled, “Federal Futures: Imagining Federation, Constitution, and World in Late Colonial India” offers one of the first historical accounts of Indian federalism.
India’s sovereign debt reached unprecedented levels in 2020, partly driven by the policy response to COVID-19, but also by low growth and high interest rates. Some have argued that high levels of debt may be less concerning in an environment of low interest rates. But there is also a significant body of evidence that points to several mechanisms through which high levels of sovereign debt can have negative effects on the economy.
In May 2014, in his first speech to the Indian parliament, Prime Minister Narendra Modi demanded that politicians work together to protect women and girls from violence. Modi reiterated this message in his first Independence Day address, criticizing parents for failing to discipline their boys. Since 2014, state governments run by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have taken measures to curtail street harassment through special policing units. Why police street harassment?
Amrita Kurian is a Visiting Faculty in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Ashoka University, Sonipat, and a CASI Non-Resident Scholar. Her research, which spans expertise, agricultural markets, and monocultural ecologies, offers a humanistic critique of expert interventions in India’s agri-commodity markets.
Shikhar Singh is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Duke University, researching democratic accountability, political behavior, and the politics of development, with a focus on South Asia. Prior to Duke, he was a 2023-24 CASI Postdoctoral Research Fellow.
Hindu nationalism is on the rise in India; its discipline matched by the swagger that comes with impunity. Its victories have been regional and national, reverberating through the citizenry. The Citizenship Amendment Act and the building of a temple where a mosque once stood in Ayodhya were new thresholds. But since then, and in between, numerous other symptoms betray the spread of this political ideology across the country.