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NLS | General Stacks | 303.4840954 WAI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | PB | Checked out | Recommended by Dr. Anindita Adhikari | 25/08/2026 | 40855 |
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| 303.484 OOM-I Social movements / | 303.484 OOM-II Social movements / | 303.48409 TAR Power in movement : social movements and contentious politics / | 303.4840954 WAI Farmers protest! : a movement for our times / | 303.484098 SIM Meaningful resistance : market reforms and the roots of social protest in Latin America / | 303.49 WAH Designing Regenerative Cultures | 303.6 CHA The violence in our bones : mapping the deadly fault lines within Indian society / |
Map of Farmers' Protests, 1857-2021 -
Forward -
List of Abbreviations -
Preface –
1. A Brief History of Farmers Protests -
2. Farmers' Protests, 2020-2021: Withdraw the Three Farm Laws -
3 The Challenges in Agriculture -
4. The Green Revolution and the Economic Reforms -
5. The Ivisibilised Farmers: Women, Agricultural Labourers, Dalits, Adivasis and 'Tenants -
6. Environment, Climate Change and Agriculture -
Epilogue: The Struggle Continues -
Endnotes -
Acknowledgements -
About the Author.
Under colonial rule in India in 1917, Mohandas K Gandhi led a satyagraha alongside local farmers in Bihar, resulting in what would become the non-violent movement for India’s independence. More than a century later, one of the largest non-violent farmers’ protests in recent world history took place in New Delhi. The unrest began in Punjab and Haryana in June 2020 and reached India’s capital city in November 2020. By January 2021, hundreds of thousands of farmers and farm labourers demonstrated against three draconian farm laws passed at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. The farmers’ protest continued until the Indian Government finally relented and withdrew the laws. Most people living in towns and cities in India today have been cut off from their rural roots. They know little about how their food reaches them from farm to table. They know even less about the lives of the farmers and farm labourers who produce this food. Farmers Protest! tries to bridge this gap as it narrates why Indian farmers were compelled to resist, and how they are the first responders to the challenges created by climate change.