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The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hopes of Peace (Woodrow Wilson Center Press) [Paperback]

352;umit Ganguly (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 13, 1999 0521655668 978-0521655668
This book traces the origins of the insurgency in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir. The first theoretically-grounded account, and the most complete, it is based on extensive interviews. Ganguly's central argument is that the insurgency can be explained by political mobilization and institutional decay. In an attempt to woo the Muslims, the government dramatically expanded literacy, mass media, and higher education. Meanwhile, fearing potential secessionist proclivities, it stifled the development of political institutions. Unable to express dissent in an institutional context, the Kashmiris resorted to violence.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Like an investigative journalist, Ganguly has gotten into the trenches and his account is the result of extensive interviews with government officials, Kashmiri activists and militants, the media, members of nongovernmental organizations, and military personnel both in India and in Pakistan as well as those in the United States. Consequently, The Crisis in Kashmir is perhaps the most exhaustive contemporary study of the Kasmir dispute....Ganguly's book is recommended reading for any student of the Kashmir crisis." Aziz Haniffa, India Abroad

"This volume represents social science at its best. It is a detailed case study of the Kashmiri insurgency...based on extensive interviews with government officials, Kashmiri activists, journalists, and military personnel....The volume concludes with some sensible recommendations for moving toward a resolution of the crises." Foreign Affairs

"Both as an old fashioned narrative and as a rigorous theoretical endeavour it is outstanding." Outlook

"This volume represents social science at its best. It is a detailed case study..." Foreign Affairs

"...an excellent teaching resource....Essential for India specialists, political scientists, ethnicists, international theorists, and all levels of students, it can also be appreciated by general readers." R. Khator, Choice

"Sumit Ganguly's thoughtful Crisis in Kashmir analyzes political events in Kashmir since 1947 particularly well...Ganguly's book offers insightful surveys of the theoretical literature on ethnopolitical mobilization, political developments in Kashmir, and possible options and strategies for the Indian Government to follow." International Journal of Hindu Studies

Book Description

This book traces the origins of the insurgency in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir. The first theoretically-grounded account, and the most complete, it is based on extensive interviews. Ganguly's central argument is that the insurgency can be explained by political mobilization and institutional decay. In an attempt to woo the Muslims, the government dramatically expanded literacy, mass media, and higher education. Meanwhile, fearing potential secessionist proclivities, it stifled the development of political institutions. Unable to express dissent in an institutional context, the Kashmiris resorted to violence.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 204 pages
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press (February 13, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0521655668
  • ISBN-13: 978-0521655668
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #571,840 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More to this conflict than you see on CNN, June 3, 2002
By 
Margaret Shaw (West Babylon, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hopes of Peace (Woodrow Wilson Center Press) (Paperback)
The problems involving Pakistan, India and the people of Kashmir are complex and over time have become more and more volatile. To understand the history of this area and why it poses such a threat is not easy for someone who has only recently decided to learn more than what is provided on television or in the newspaper. Sumit Ganguly's book presents a thorough history. I have searched several sources both online and in other books and haven't found anything elsewhere that is not in this book. Ganguly offers more than one solution to the problem but it seems that no one is really interested in listening right now.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Reflections of a Pandit Pundit, January 21, 2012
This review is from: The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hopes of Peace (Woodrow Wilson Center Press) (Paperback)
Kashmir interests me on several levels, and not just because of the increase in our trade and business relationships with people on the subcontintent. As a Canadian Federalist I see elements both common and different with Quebec separatism - and Quebec was in "crisis" around the same time. As a liberal centrist my concern is about societies that polarize themselves, or fall to one extreme or the other - and here the Indian nation as a whole has done reasonably well navigating the waters. But to see how it got there one needs to look at the history.

To summarize the situation is not to do it full justice. Historically the valley of Kashmir and the adjacent territory of Jumma formed a single Raj with a Muslim majority, but one that was ruled by Hindus. The region is the north of India abutting Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and unilaterally annexed (by China) Tibet. (Ganguly provides 2 reference maps at the opening of the book.) In 1947 the goal the Indian National Congress was to create a secular and democratic state. In contrast the goal of Pakistani nationalists was to create a religious Muslim state for South Asian Muslims (pp8). Kashmir, physically between the two, could have gone either way. A third option, independence for the landlocked region was a weak alternative. Interestingly enough, and I found this a fascinating point, Kashmiri independence was opposed by China who viewed it as a similar signal for Tibet.

From the Indian POV, Pakistan and the ISI were the agents behind fomenting insurgent in Kashmir since the late 1970s, through funding madrassas and training guerilla fighters among the youth and encouraged towards Islamic fundamentalism. Pakistan's argument was to appeal to nationalist and Islamic identity, citing corruption, betrayal, despotism, religious discrimination and other memes designed to broker discontent. In the 1965 insurgency featuring infiltratrators from Pakistan did not received local support, most Kashmiris would up siding with the Indian government and many of the mujahadeen were turned in. Overall Pakistan's attempts at instigation backfired badly. Not only were these allegations too sweeping, they paled against the same behaviour exhibited by the accusers, writ large in the accompanying democide that occured during the 1971 secession of Bangladesh.

Ganguly emphasizes that in the Indian model Kashmir is not the only province where a federal minority is a local majority - the Sikhs of Punjab being the closest example. If Kashmir were to leave that might lead others to follow. As such most Indians regard Kashmir as an integral part of the country (the same can be said of English Canada's regard for Quebec), and though the feeling inside Kashmir itself is mixed the argument for pluralism is that it has offered more opportunities for growth, liberty and advancement that the alternative next door in Pakistan.

Which is not to say that the central government did not make it's share of mistakes, and Ganguly does a good job of detailing the negative impact of Indira and Rajiv Ghandi's drift to centralize state power. Another problem was the central government's granting a concession restricting against selling land in Kashmir and Jammu for Indian nationals from outside the region. New Delhi also tended to ignore corruption and mismanagement in Khashmir itself, rather than stirring up trouble with Sheikh Abdullah and other Muslim leaders. Ganguly concludes with his assessment of options going forward.

The book does have a few drawbacks, one of which is the large number of players in the conflict, some key, others fleeting, that are mentioned. There is a profile of the various insurgent groups in one of the appendices at the back, but a timeline and a dramatis personae reference would also have helped. At times I found it difficult to keep track of the relationships and allegiances.

Ganguly's book was written in 1997. At the risk of speaking too soon, the crisis in Kashmir is over. The Federalists won. The separatists and insurgents lost. The Kashmiri economy is growing and the Pakistani alternative offers little attraction. That doesn't mean that the government in New Delhi can be complacent or that secession is still not a possibility - but that is a problem for another read.
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6 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Incisive, January 11, 2001
By 
debdip k. mukherjee (Dunn Loring, VA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hopes of Peace (Woodrow Wilson Center Press) (Paperback)
Easily the most detailed and well organized treatise on this unfortunate conflict. While on one hand it establishes the nefarious designs of the Pakistani establishment, it also exposes Indoor Gandhi's chicanery in subverting the will of the Kashmir electorate via crass political subterfuge (e.g. transfer of Governorship to her puppet, a certain Jagmohan Malhotra). One of Dr. Ganguly's proposals, granting autonomy, is a dangerous one; this could lead to similar demands from the other disturbed states. It is critical that we listen carefully to the demands of the disenfranchised and work to mitigate decades worth of pain. The 1965 conflict deserves a more thorough coverage though.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In 1989 a violent separatist movement erupted in the fabled Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
state assembly elections, irredentist claim, institutional decay, insurgent groups
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New Delhi, National Conference, Indira Gandhi, Farooq Abdullah, New York, Sheikh Abdullah, South Asia, India Today, Rajiv Gandhi, Indian Union, Sumit Ganguly, Congress Party, Delhi Domestic Service, All-India Radio, Balraj Puri, India Abroad, Maharaja Hari Singh, Oxford University Press, Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, United States, Indian Constitution, Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, Plebiscite Front, Simla Agreement, Instrument of Accession
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