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Articles

The Maoist insurgency in India: between crime and revolution

Pages 203-220 | Published online: 30 Apr 2012
 

Abstract

Since 2004, the Indian government has described the country's Maoist insurgency as a grave threat to domestic security. A study of the sustaining dynamics behind Maoist violence suggests that the rebels are growing operationally stronger due to profits derived from organized crime. Having built up a parasitic economy that operates within the boundaries of nominal state control, they are proceeding to undermine that same control. In effect, the Maoists have assumed characteristics of a Mafia group. With India's economic growth having surged in recent years, their ability to finance aggressive operations and consolidate their subversive infrastructure has increased correspondingly.

Notes

 1. The Maoists trace their genealogy to anti-colonial revolts against British rule during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Their in-house propaganda depicts the present-day Indian government as merely a successor to the colonial regime, and thus, a proxy for Western capitalism. CitationSuykens, ‘Maoist Martyrs’, 381.

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 5. CitationPaul, ‘Maoists Raise Rs 2500 Crore’.

 6. CitationSingh, The Trajectory of the Movement', 13.

 7. CitationSingh, The Naxalite Movement in India, 113–14.

 8. CitationJha, ‘Political Bases and Dimensions of the Naxalite Movement’, 64.

 9. ‘Maoists Want to Overthrow Indian State by Citation2050: Pillai’.

10. Singh, The Naxalite Movement in India, 190, 272.

11. CitationMandal, ‘Cruel Killer? Not Me, Says Maoist Leader Kishenji’.

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27. CitationBhaduri, ‘Development or Developmental Terrorism?’, 553.

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30. CitationKujur, ‘From CRZ to SEZ’.

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38. CitationRamana, ‘Revolution and Crime: Illegitimate violence’.

39. CitationDickie, Cosa Nostra, 2–3.

40. CitationSiebert, ‘Mafia and Anti-Mafia’, 44.

41. Harriss, ‘The Naxalite Movement in India’, 17.

42. CitationSahni, ‘India's Maoists and the Dreamscape of “Solutions”’.

43. CitationRamana, ‘Naxal Menace: Security Forces Challenged in Difficult Terrain’.

44. CitationSingh, ‘Maoists: Sabotaging the future’.

45. CitationRamana, ‘A Critical Evaluation of the Union Government's Response to the Maoist Challenge’, 750.

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49. CitationShah and Pettigrew, ‘Windows into a Revolution: Ethnographies of Maoism in South Asia’, 239.

50. CitationFollian, The Last Godfathers, 270–5.

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