Sejuti Das Gupta teaches at the Department of Sociology, James Madison College, Michigan State University. She has also taught at the School of Development Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India. Her research interests are agrarian economics, agrarian policy and development, political sociology, rural studies, economic growth and liberalisation.
'An important book that combines class analysis with subnational analysis to understand the changing nature of state-class and political economy of India in the context of ongoing globalization and economic change. In the process we are able to locate ongoing inequalities with a powerful framework and place both global and domestic change alongside agrarian crises and problems. The framework outlined in the book updates the nature of state since 2004 and how caste power also enhances class power, creating a political settlement and bargain between fractions of classes and the changing nature of the state. It is a book worth reading and digesting both for its empirical analysis of agrarian class relations across Chhattisgarh, Gujarat and Karnataka and for the notions of state-class relations, structure, and political settlement that it advances.' Aseema Sinha, Claremont McKenna College, USA 'This provocative study of agrarian politics in post-liberalization India illuminates the relevance of class analysis for understanding India's agricultural policies. Its detailed study of three Indian states – Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, and Karnataka – provides a fascinating account of India's ongoing rural transformation, especially the causes of its growing inequality. This important book offers valuable insights for all interested in the sources of change in India's rural political economy.' John Echeverri-Gent, University of Virginia 'A much-needed volume that provides a comprehensive analysis of agrarian transformation and the effects of state policies on class fractions and the agrarian capitalist class in particular in post-liberalization India. The updated version focuses on this and much more; highlighting the diversification of agrarian classes and the increasing opportunities for accumulation for proprietary classes. This well-informed and empirically grounded book is a must read for all those who want to understand emerging relations between class and state, new processes of wealth accretion, intensification of inequalities in India and why globalization is not a great equalizer.' Zoya Hasan, Jawaharlal Nehru University 'This book provides fresh and critical insights on the emerging relations between the agrarian classes and the state within the milieu of economic reforms over the past three decades. The intricate weaving of micro-field evidence with the macro-regulatory processes, meticulously undertaken, constitutes a valuable piece of scholarship that students of political economy will cherish.' Arindam Banerjee, BML Munjal University