Markets, Capitalism and Urban Space in India: Right to Sell

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This book analyses the question of the right to the city, informal economies and the non-western shape of neoliberal governance in India through a new analytic: the right to sell.

The book examines why and how states attempt to curb, control, and eliminate markets of urban informal street vendors. Focusing on Kolkata, the author provides a theoretical explanation of this puzzle by distilling and analysing the inherent tensions among the constitutive elements of neoliberal governance, namely, growth imperative, market activism, and corporatization, and demonstrates its implications for the formal/informal boundaries of the economy.

A useful addition to the existing literatures on the right to the city, informal economies, and the shapes that neoliberalism takes in the non-west, the book provides a non-western counter to accounts of neoliberalism and will be of interest to academics working in the fields of South Asian Studies, Urban Studies, and Political Economy.

Author(s): Anirban Acharya
Series: Routledge Research on Urban Asia
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 238
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Part I Anxiety of Markets
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Neoliberalism, (In)formality, and Markets
Part II Politics of Street Vending
Chapter 3 Selling of Spaces/Spaces of Selling
Chapter 4 Politics of Disruption
Part III Conflicts/Compromise
Chapter 5 Rights or Rightlessness?
Chapter 6 Conclusion
Index