EDUCATION, UNEMPLOYMENT AND MASCULINITIES IN INDIA

Craig Jeffrey, Patricia Jeffery, Roger Jeffery

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract / Description of output

Education, Unemployment and Masculinities in India re-evaluates debates on education, modernity, and social change in contemporary development studies and anthropology. Education is widely imputed with the capacity to transform the prospects of the poor. But in the context of widespread unemployment in rural north India, it is better understood as a contradictory resource, providing marginalized youth with certain freedoms but also drawing them more tightly into systems of inequality.
The book advances this argument through detailed case studies of educated but unemployed or underemployed young men in rural western Uttar Pradesh. This book draws on fourteen months' ethnographic research with young men from middle caste Hindu, Muslim, and ex-Untouchable backgrounds. In addition to offering a new perspective on how education affects the rural poor in South Asia, Education, Unemployment and Masculinities in India includes in-depth reflection on the politics of modernity, changing rural masculinities, and caste and communal politics.
Contents
1 Introduction
2 The Political Economy of Uttar Pradesh
3 Masculinity on a Shoestring?
4 From Canefield to Campus (and Back Again): The Social Strategies of Educated Jats
5 Dalit Revolution? New Politicians in Uttar Pradesh
6 Muslims’ Strategies in an Age of Insecurity
7 Down and Out in Nangal and Qaziwala: The Cultural Politics of Resentment
8 Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Original languageEnglish
PublisherSocial Science Press-Orient BlackSwan Joint Publication
Number of pages256
ISBN (Print)978-91-87358-58-9
Publication statusPublished - May 2010

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'EDUCATION, UNEMPLOYMENT AND MASCULINITIES IN INDIA'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this