Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs
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Shivaji Mukherjee ─ Colonial Origins of Maoist Insurgency in India: Historical Legacies of British Indirect Rule

Friday, September 12, 2014

2 p.m.

MIT Center for International Studies, Lucian Pye Conference Room, E40-464, 1 Amherst Street, Cambridge, MA

Shivaji Mukherjee, University of Toronto

Shivaji Mukherjee's research interests lie at the intersection of state formation, civil conflict, and political economy of development. He worked as a Research Assistant at the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi, and then did an MA in Political Science at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and a PhD in political science at Yale University. His dissertation is on the Maoist insurgency in India, and uses data gathered during field work, archival data and quantitative analysis of sub national datasets to demonstrate that colonial institutions of indirect rule selected by the British set up the structural conditions for post colonial insurgency through path dependent mechanisms. Shivaji hopes to work in the future on state formation, the use of different kinds of counter insurgency strategy by the Indian state, and also various aspects of the Maoist insurgency, and other ethnic insurgencies in India.

Saxena Center for Contemporary South Asia