Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition

The past ten years has been a decade of land wars in India. Rapid urbanization is spilling beyond city boundaries into the highways connecting large cities, instigating a frenzied consolidation and conversion of agricultural lands into urban/industrial lands. This process is fraught with conflict, a...

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Main Author: Balakrishnan, Sai Swarna
Other Authors: Fainstein, Susan Saltzman
Language:en_US
Published: Harvard University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10967
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11051195
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-110511952015-08-14T15:42:18ZLand Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban TransitionBalakrishnan, Sai SwarnaUrban planningcooperativesIndialand conflictsurban transitionThe past ten years has been a decade of land wars in India. Rapid urbanization is spilling beyond city boundaries into the highways connecting large cities, instigating a frenzied consolidation and conversion of agricultural lands into urban/industrial lands. This process is fraught with conflict, as different social groups compete to stake their claims on the land value increments - the increases in land value due to the change in land use from agricultural to non-agricultural - of these newly converted highway lands. Against the backdrop of conflictual land consolidation processes, this dissertation examines the unique case of the Pune highways, located in the state of Maharashtra in India. Along some of Pune’s highways, agrarian landowners – sometimes voluntarily and sometimes with the mediation of bureaucrats – are pooling their fragmented agricultural lands, converting them to urban and industrial lands, and forming collective institutions of land ownership to own and control these newly converted highway lands. In other words, agrarian landowners along these highways are not being displaced from their lands. Instead, they are capturing some or all of the land value increments, and are benefiting from the urban transition. I examine the conditions that made these collective institutions possible in the Pune region, and the possibility and desirability of transferring these conditions to other regions elsewhere that are mired in similar land conflicts. My main finding is that the core of India’s land conflicts is a change in the valuation of land from fertility to location. This new, highway-induced restructuring of the land market interacts in complex ways with older caste-based forms of agrarian land control and these changes in land-based social relations is the source of conflict. India’s rapid urbanization along highways is taking place not within cities, but in-between cities, and is leading to new forms of politics that defies the urban-rural dichotomies. I also use Pune’s land conflicts and cooperatives as a window into the broader phenomenon of India’s 21st century transition from an agrarian to urban economy, and articulate the major elements of the new regional institutions that are needed for managing land markets during an uncertain urban transition.Fainstein, Susan Saltzman2013-09-18T15:44:36Z2013-09-1820132013-09-18T15:44:36ZThesis or DissertationBalakrishnan, Sai Swarna. 2013. Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10967http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11051195en_USopenhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAAHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Urban planning
cooperatives
India
land conflicts
urban transition
spellingShingle Urban planning
cooperatives
India
land conflicts
urban transition
Balakrishnan, Sai Swarna
Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
description The past ten years has been a decade of land wars in India. Rapid urbanization is spilling beyond city boundaries into the highways connecting large cities, instigating a frenzied consolidation and conversion of agricultural lands into urban/industrial lands. This process is fraught with conflict, as different social groups compete to stake their claims on the land value increments - the increases in land value due to the change in land use from agricultural to non-agricultural - of these newly converted highway lands. Against the backdrop of conflictual land consolidation processes, this dissertation examines the unique case of the Pune highways, located in the state of Maharashtra in India. Along some of Pune’s highways, agrarian landowners – sometimes voluntarily and sometimes with the mediation of bureaucrats – are pooling their fragmented agricultural lands, converting them to urban and industrial lands, and forming collective institutions of land ownership to own and control these newly converted highway lands. In other words, agrarian landowners along these highways are not being displaced from their lands. Instead, they are capturing some or all of the land value increments, and are benefiting from the urban transition. I examine the conditions that made these collective institutions possible in the Pune region, and the possibility and desirability of transferring these conditions to other regions elsewhere that are mired in similar land conflicts. My main finding is that the core of India’s land conflicts is a change in the valuation of land from fertility to location. This new, highway-induced restructuring of the land market interacts in complex ways with older caste-based forms of agrarian land control and these changes in land-based social relations is the source of conflict. India’s rapid urbanization along highways is taking place not within cities, but in-between cities, and is leading to new forms of politics that defies the urban-rural dichotomies. I also use Pune’s land conflicts and cooperatives as a window into the broader phenomenon of India’s 21st century transition from an agrarian to urban economy, and articulate the major elements of the new regional institutions that are needed for managing land markets during an uncertain urban transition.
author2 Fainstein, Susan Saltzman
author_facet Fainstein, Susan Saltzman
Balakrishnan, Sai Swarna
author Balakrishnan, Sai Swarna
author_sort Balakrishnan, Sai Swarna
title Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
title_short Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
title_full Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
title_fullStr Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
title_full_unstemmed Land Conflicts and Cooperatives along Pune's Highways: Managing India's Agrarian to Urban Transition
title_sort land conflicts and cooperatives along pune's highways: managing india's agrarian to urban transition
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2013
url http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10967
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:11051195
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