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100 _aIyengar, Prashant
_957509
245 _a Khutput: Scandal, native politics and the impersonal state in colonial India
260 _aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review
300 _a 62(3), Jul-Sep, 2025: p.335-374
520 _aIn the mid-nineteenth century, the Bombay Presidency in western India came to be embroiled in a corruption scandal called the ‘Khutput’ controversy. Rumours abounded that Indian ‘natives’ had been successful in ‘secretly obtaining the friendship of persons in power’ and had used this influence to subvert the state. Anxious to dispel these rumours, the Bombay Government sent out a circular to its top officials across the Presidency soliciting their views on whether this subversive friendship—Khutput—was real. This article draws on over 50 responses received to this circular to piece together an account of the political morality of the mid-nineteenth century Bombay state, derived from its key architects. I argue that Khutput was a brand of ‘native’ politics that was transactionally elaborated and customised to capitalise on the vulnerabilities of the new European mode of government. In response to the Bombay Government’s invitation to suggest measures to ‘eradicate this evil’ the officers recommended steps such as the institution of uniform procedures in the bureau, transparency, impartiality, office discipline and publicity—several of the very elements that, coincidentally, Weber would later aggregate under the term ‘bureaucracy’. Finally, this article offers an alternate genealogy of administrative law norms as originating within the executive, and intended as checks against an overreaching, corrupt judiciary.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00194646251350776
650 _aColonialism, Politics, Corruption, The modern state, Administrative law, Bureaucracy.
_957510
773 _aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review
942 _cAR