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        Date: 07-Sep-2010

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So that people from both parts of Kashmir can freely meet
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South Asia News Links Today

The News ,Pakistan

Dawn , Pakistan

Daily Times ,Pakistan

Frontier Post ,Pakistan

Daily Outlook, Afghanistan

Institute For Afghan Studies

Sunday Observer , Srilanka

Himalayan Times , Nepal

Daily Star, Bangladesh

 

 

 

   
Historical Events / Personalities

The Passions of Arthur Koestler-Roger Boylan

Present historic: Carlyle, Robespierre, and the French Revolution-ii-Ann Talbot

Present historic: Carlyle, Robespierre and the French Revolution-1-Ann Talbot

Rosa Luxemburg & the Mass Strike-Lea Haro

Chris Harman: Selected Writings

Sartre: Conversations with a “Bourgeois Revolutionary”-Joseph L. Walsh

Stalin's Secret War Plans: Why Hitler Invaded the Soviet Union -Richard Tedor

Shays’ Rebellion and the American Revolution -John Peterson

 

 

   
   
   
Dissident Voices

Marxism and anarchism-Paul Blackledge

The Legacy of Andy Stern-Melvyn Dubofsky

Hands off Cuba! Defend the Cuban revolution – fight for International socialism

Inside the Castro Family-Robert H. Miller

What was communism? -Fred Halliday

Not all Marxism is dogmatism: a reply to Michel Husson

Horror in Haiti – Imperialism to blame

From hero to villain —Ernest Mandel

 

 

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Literature and Art

“New” historiography of labour -DEBDAS BANERJEE

 

LABOUR MATTERS — Towards Global Histories: Edited by Marcel van der Linden and Prabhu P. Mohapatra; Tulika Books, 35 A/1 (3rd Floor), Shahpur Jat, New Delhi-110049. Rs. 695.

The transcendental (to use Schelling’s term) grand theory of writing labour history fails to cope with the phenomenal rise of the finance capital coupled with the emergence of global value chains reinforcing the north-south dichotomy, which have led to the fading-out of the “formal-informal” duality. The classical labour history was reserved for the West, the factory, and the urban, while the rest were treated as residual and derivative. So, this collecti on of 15 essays attempts to bring out “new issues of comparison” where labour matters: the multiplicity of labour forms found across the globe, within which the individual worker is embedded, provides important links to the “new” historiography of labour.

Role of state

The literature on state intervention in the labour market, while concentrating on the modern industrial sector, mostly reflects upon the formalising and legalising aspects of the network of industrial relations.

Chitra Joshi highlights the ways in which state legislation in fact sanctioned the coercive powers of private capital in relation to labour. The involvement of the state in the mobilisation of convict labour in public works in 19th century-India has interesting parallels in South Africa, where the role of the state as an instrument in the creation of coercive regimes of labour is more visible. In India, the colonial regime wanted to develop an agricultural colony in the Andaman Islands in the mid-19th century (Aparna Vaidik), but the region was unsuitable for locating even a naval station or a port of call or a convict station, unless a huge amount of labour was spent on it.

The British officials began moving convicts from the mainland to the Islands colony to work in the forests or as load-carriers, boatmen, gardeners, electricians, domestic servants, and so on. The paradigm that the nature of class consciousness is attributable to the underlying level of industrial development as well as the attempt to chart the history of labour mobilisation in evolutionary terms are contested by Prashant Kidambi in his piece on the workers of the Bombay cotton mills during the period 1898-1919.

For the South Asia labour historians writing on workers’ solidarity, migrant labour generally poses difficulties. To a band of economists, mobility is a voluntary, naïve, and apolitical act. However, Rafiul Ahmed in a study on the mobility of an oppressed community — the Musahars of the middle Gangetic plains — highlights how it helped labourers to break away from patron-client relationships and become free, moving up from a semi-free state.

Peasant-worker split

The reasons why the split household of the peasant-worker appeared as a phenomenon during the Russian industrialisation of the late 19th century are fairly well documented. But little has been done to systematically trace the subsequent evolution of the migratory pattern during the early 20th century, let alone the post-revolutionary period. Gijs Kessler has looked into the split household of the peasant-worker both before and after the 1917 revolution.

The orthodoxy claims that the rise of trade unionism — the intrusion of “outsider” — is the main cause of the higher incidence of strikes. It is necessarily a political phenomenon and so gives room for the political parties to intervene in the workers’ movement.

Subsequent fracture in the movement was not therefore unpredictable. Sandwiched between the state and the political parties, the ‘subaltern autonomy’ gets wrong attention in the general literature. Nitin Sinha’s study on the Jamalpur strikes of 1919 and 1928 suggests that the workers were autonomous enough to initiate agitation, but they were also aware of the importance of ‘outside’ influence.

On the whole, this is an excellent publication. What is lacking is an essay or a section that ties up the preamble with the rest of the articles to provide, by way of conclusion, a distilled overview of the core elements of the theme as discussed by the contributors.

http://www.hindu.com/br/2009/12/22/stories/2009122250021200.htm




Fair Use Notice

Discalimer

As nationalism rises, will the European Union fall?-Charles Kupchan

 

The Left and the Jihad-Fred Halliday

 

Biopiracy, GM Seeds and Rural India -Priya Kumar

 

Biopiracy, GM Seeds and Rural India -Priya Kumar

 

The End Of Capitalism? What Lies Ahead?-Alex Knight

 

A Left Approach to Development-Prabhat Patnaik

 

Working-class Intellectuals-Gus Hall

 

Contradiction as Source of Structure and Development in Nature, Society, and Thought-Erwin Marquit

 
 

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PAKISTAN IN GLOBAL POLITICS

Afghanistan: Interests & stakes-Saleem Safi

 

Afghanistan: A case of drug based economy-Jawayria Malik

 

Benazir Bhutto :THE report of the United Nations Commission of Inquiry -Palpable fraud -A.G. NOORANI

 

All Kayani’s Men-Anatol Lieven

 

Taliban: the unanswered questions-Iqbal Haider

 
 

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NUCLEAR / DEFENCE DEALS

Chinese duplicity

 

NUCLEAR DEAL-Hidden side

 

Mortgaging nuclear crown jewels

 

A Global Approach to Iranian Nuclear Ambitions

 

Revelations unravel hype and spin -Nuclear Deal

 

123 Agreement-Brahama Chelleny

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

LITERATURE & ARTS

Varieties of Activist Experience — Civil society in South Asia: Edited by David N. Gellner;

 

COLLECTED PAPERS IN THEORETICAL ECONOMICS - 4 Volumes: Kaushik Basu

 

A critical study on Tilak, Jinnah -B. SURENDRA RAO

 

The Sino-Indian enigma -A. MADHAVAN

 

Che Guevara — Jo Chale Toh Jaan se Guzar Gaye-Dr Saulat Nagi

 

Cold War's myths -A.G. NOORANI

 

Marx at the Margins-Kevin Anderson

 

Reflections on existence - Shelley Walia

 

Philosophy in the Present-Alain Badiou and Slavoj Žižek

 

Gauhar Jaan

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

SCIENTIFIC FRONTIER

Stem cell biology and its complications -Gina Kolata

 

Pioneering geneticist creates synthetic life -Ian Sample

 

Newton's tree to experience zero gravity, in space -Richard Luscombe

 

The ethics of egg manipulation

 

Protein 'behind Alzheimer's fits'

 

What Stem Cells Can Do?and Can't

 

Mammoth's genome pieced together

 

Humans owe their identity to 'junk' DNA

 

Lung Cancer Gene Discovery A Sign of Cancer's Future

 

At the frontier of physics

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

OPINION AND ANALYSIS

The Holocaust, genocide studies, and politics-Martin Shaw

 

Back to Marx: How can his work help us to understand modern times? - Laurent Etre

 

No pressure, then: religious freedom in Islam-Patricia Crone

 

Capitalism and the Ecological Footprint-Samir Amin

 

ISLAM - people and politics

 

What was communism? -Fred Halliday

 

Women and Media in Saudi Arabia: Changes and Contradictions-Naomi Sakr

 

History and its Uses-Tim Stanley

 

How Italy's Floundering Left Has Helped Keep Berlusconi in Power-Yascha Mounk

 

‘Sovereignty’ and international order -Farhad Mazhar

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 

        Editor -in-Chief - : M.M.Gupta                                                                                                          Consulting Editor - : Dr. Agha Ashraf Ali

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