Development, Decentralization and Democracy: Exploring Social Capital and Politicization in the Bengal Region

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NIAS Press, 2000 - 175 pages

This book explores the controversy in political science surrounding the civil society/social capital paradigm, by studying the performance of decentralized governments in West Bengal and Bangladesh. Gram panchayats and NGOs provide the focus of the study.

The study intends to determine whether a growth in social capital can explain why decentralized governments seem to be more effective in West Bengal, though both areas decentralized their governments around the same time. The two regions have shared for centuries a common history, civic culture, ethnic identity and language, though religion led to the separation of the regions.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
6
the result of social capital formation
33
Decentralization and popular participation in India
47
Civil society effective participation and the local state in rural
73
Analysing the generation of social capital andor different types
131
Conclusion and some theoretical reflections
151
Index
171
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