Agrarian Reform for a Liberal Pattern of Society? Karnataka's Land Policy and the New Dispensation
Published By: ISEC, Bangalore | Published Date: January, 12 , 2006It is puzzling how much the discourse of development has backed
away from the seemingly central question of rural poverty: land.
Elaborate rules concerning its distribution, rights, regulation, protection,
utilities have multiple development objectives, but poverty alleviation,
individual liberty and community revitalization have long been on the
stated agenda throughout India -- with radically varying levels of effort
and effect. The Karnataka Land Reforms Act [Amended] that came into
force on March 1, l974, is in line with the vision of the founders. Its
pattern reflects -- more so than in West Bengal, which is widely lauded
for its agrarian reforms -- the conclusions of the Congress Agrarian
Reforms Committee of l949 and promoted over time with variable
enthusiasm by Union governments. Such agrarian reforms have been
considered among the most important mechanisms for achieving a
socialist pattern of society as indicated in the Preamble and Directive
Principles of State Policy (Part IV) of the Constitution. Elaborate and
careful policy thinking by the founders connected classic agrarian
reforms with poverty alleviation. What happens to land policy as liberal
economic policy replaces “socialism” as directive principle? There are
widespread claims -- both normative and empirical -- of "reversal of
land reforms" in various parts of India under pressure of new export
strategies, globalization, and multiplication of sub-subsistence holdings
over time. What are the implications of reforming the reforms for
poverty alleviation under new conditions?
Author(s): Ronald Herring | Posted on: Jan 12, 2006 | Views(2441) | Download (2100)