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<title>Contributions to Indian Sociology current issue</title>
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<prism:coverDisplayDate>May/August 2009</prism:coverDisplayDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Work and autonomy in the assembly of printed circuit boards: An ethnographic account]]></title>
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<description><![CDATA[<p>Work, conceptualised as a concrete and practical activity, continues to remain an under-explored problematic in the field of Indian labour studies. The neglect of ethnographic research techniques could perhaps account for this shortcoming. Based on non-participant observation in a public sector company, this article examines the practices and attitudes of workers specialised in assembling printed circuit boards for electronic telephones. Despite the standardised nature of the product and its low economic value, operatives allocated to this task experience a significant degree of autonomy in their daily activities. In consonance with their personal inclinations and interests, they are not only free to structure their immediate physical environment but also to control their work pace and organise the way they perform their jobs. In all these spheres of practice, important variations can be observed from one individual to the next. This situation belies the conventional thesis equating semi-skilled occupations of the kind described here with job fragmentation, the absence of individual discretion and stringent managerial controls. The departure from the norm stems in part from the desire to preserve a harmonious industrial relations climate and in part from the non-strategic character of the end product&mdash;telephones&mdash;in the company&rsquo;s portfolio. But slack disciplinary controls, a problem common to state-owned enterprises in general, could also explain the latitude granted to workers.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Subramanian, D.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300201</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Work and autonomy in the assembly of printed circuit boards: An ethnographic account]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>216</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>183</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Articles</prism:section>
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<title><![CDATA[The Gulf in the imagination: Migration, Malayalam cinema and regional identity]]></title>
<link>http://cis.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/43/2/217?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This article, taking up for analysis the three-decade-long relationship between the economy influenced by the Gulf and Malayalam cinema, in its industrial and narrative context, argues that the Gulf has been a significant point of reference for the imagining of a cultural identity in Kerala. It attempts to weave together three aspects&mdash;the development models that are in place, the economic conditions within which the film industry operates and the textual aspects of the films produced&mdash;to foreground the links between the economy, aesthetics and the imagining of regional identity. I argue that the contestation over regional identity was played out on aesthetic grounds, where the wealth and objects associated with the Gulf economy were deployed both at the formal and thematic levels, to produce claims about the legitimacy and desirability of the changes that become visible in the economic and social hierarchies within the region. The article examines the representations of the Gulf within the region, using select films from the commercial and art house cinemas of the 1970s, and middlebrow cinema of the 1980s and the turn of the century. These are read along with the economic changes within the film industry and the discourse of development in the region to mark the shifts that have happened to the desires and despairs associated with the Gulf dream.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Radhakrishnan, R.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300202</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[The Gulf in the imagination: Migration, Malayalam cinema and regional identity]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>245</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>217</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Articles</prism:section>
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<title><![CDATA[One day's sultan: T.N. Seshan and Indian democracy]]></title>
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<description><![CDATA[<p>T.N. Seshan&rsquo;s tenure as Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) in the early 1990s transformed the role of the Election Commission of India in India&rsquo;s electoral politics. This article examines Seshan&rsquo;s reforms but concentrates in particular on the public controversies that Seshan&rsquo;s tenure at the Election Commission engendered. Public debate about the role of the Election Commission brought to the surface underlying assumptions about the meaning of popular sovereignty in defining India&rsquo;s democracy. It highlighted the tension between law and democracy in shaping democratic ideals in India and underscored a view of elections as legally marked by a cyclical notion of &lsquo;electoral time&rsquo;. The reforms of the Election Commission during the early 1990s, in fact, opened an unprecedented period of public debate in India on the nature of electoral democracy, which this article explores.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gilmartin, D.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300203</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[One day's sultan: T.N. Seshan and Indian democracy]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>284</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>247</prism:startingPage>
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<title><![CDATA[Handled with discretion: Shaping policing practices through witch accusations]]></title>
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<description><![CDATA[<p>The Indian state of Chhattisgarh has been continually confronted with violent assaults and murder targeting individuals who are believed to practice witchcraft. By sketching the murder of accused witch, Kulwantin Bai Nishad, in 1995, I highlight the way prevailing assumptions about witchcraft, long held by the media, police and state, were contested. Intersecting with a national and state discourse of modernist ideals, witch-related violence has been transformed into a politicised object that signals extreme underdevelopment in a state whose legitimacy depends upon progress and development. The Indian Police Service (IPS), the foremost organisation to contend with these issues, maintains a crucial role in administering the citizen&ndash;state encounter. Commonly associated with attributes of corruption, misuse of authority, violence and partisan politics, the police official emerged in the findings as an ordinary citizen having a special and sometimes difficult public job. By examining a discretionary &lsquo;practice&rsquo; at work in police dealings with witchcraft accusations, I argue that power shapes what is recognised as criminal behaviour, the significance assigned to a crime and therefore, practices of policing. This article concludes that discretionary power opens up a terrain of unpredictability and &lsquo;formlessness&rsquo; that lends hope for citizen rights.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Macdonald, H. M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300204</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Handled with discretion: Shaping policing practices through witch accusations]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>315</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>285</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Articles</prism:section>
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<title><![CDATA[The politics of naming: The search for linguistic and ethnic identity in Tamil Nadu]]></title>
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<dc:creator><![CDATA[Meganathan, R.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300205</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[The politics of naming: The search for linguistic and ethnic identity in Tamil Nadu]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>324</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>317</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Articles</prism:section>
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<title><![CDATA[Book Reviews]]></title>
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<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:48:38 PDT</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/006996670904300206</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Book Reviews]]></dc:title>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>43</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>350</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-05-01</prism:publicationDate>
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