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999 _c520562
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100 _aSircar, Neelanjan
_934495
245 _aCorporate-controlled capitalism in India
260 _aSeminar
300 _a749, Jan, 2022: p.20-24
520 _aIN September 2020, three controversial farm acts passed by the Parliament gave way to one of the largest protest movements in recent history. But the protests were about much more than India’s agricultural policy – and they had significant resonance beyond the farmers of Haryana and Punjab that were most affected by the controversial farm bills.1 Rather, the larger critique made by the farmer protests coalesced around a criticism of bowing to ‘corporate interests’ supported by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In my view, the farmer protests had great impact and resonance, eventually causing the government to rescind the laws, due to popular anxieties about the changing face of business-politics relations in India. – Reproduced
650 _aCorporate-controlled capitalism, Capitalism
_934496
773 _aSeminar
906 _aCAPITALISM
942 _cAR