Skip to main content

Posts

The Roots of Inequity: Understanding Land Distribution and Development in Rural India

Nagesh Bhushan A new paper titled “ Land Inequality in India: Nature, History, and Markets” from the  World Inequality Lab  examines the underlying causes of  land inequality in India  by analysing data from over 270,000 villages. The researchers categorise the drivers of ownership disparities into  geographic suitability ,  historical institutions , and  market access . Findings reveal that  British colonial rule  and the  zamindari landlord system  created lasting inequities, while areas with high  agricultural productivity  paradoxically suffer from greater landlessness. Proximity to  towns and transport networks  further correlates with increased inequality, although  structural transformation —the shift toward non-agricultural work—can mitigate the influence of geography. Furthermore, the study identifies a complex relationship between  social hierarchy  and land access, noting that a high pre...
Recent posts

The 106th Constitutional Amendment: Reserved for whom?

By  Nagesh Bhushan Reserved for whom? India's women's-quota bill is a genuine step forward. But for the country's largest social group, it may make things worse. HYDERABAD  |  Apr 2026 I n September 2023 India's parliament passed the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam — the 106th Constitutional Amendment — reserving one-third of all seats in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies for women. The law was widely celebrated. It was also designed with a deliberate brake: reservations would not take effect until after a new census and a fresh delimitation of constituencies, meaning 2029 at the earliest. Now the central government is reportedly considering removing that brake and implementing the quotas immediately. The cheering, at least from one large constituency, has stopped. Other Backward Classes (OBCs) — a heterogeneous agglomeration of castes accounting for roughly half of India's population and a quarter of its current parliamentary representatives — have reason to worry. T...

A Position Paper on the106th Constitutional Amendment and OBC Representational Justice

  By Nagesh Bhushan The Imperative for Structural Equity: A Position Paper on the 106th Constitutional Amendment and OBC Representational Justice The Strategic Intersection of Gender and Caste in Indian Governance The passage of the  Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023  (the 106th Constitutional Amendment) marks a profound shift in the historical arc of Indian justice, signaling a transition from the  Manusmriti  dictum of  Nastri Swatantram Arhate —the denial of female autonomy—to a modern constitutional mandate for gender parity. However, this legislative milestone is fraught with a strategic tension between formal gender empowerment and the substantive requirement for caste-based representational justice. As T. Chiranjeevulu (Founder President of the BC Intellectuals Forum) and other scholars have noted, the amendment risks becoming a form of legislative arbitrage, where the appearance of progressive gender reform is utilized to consolidate traditional,...

Sacrifices Were Ours, Power Was Theirs: The Unfinished Struggle of Telangana's Backward Classes

 T.Chiranjeevulu IAS (Ret), President and Founder BCIF(BC Intellectuals Forum) On the occasion of Doddi Komaraiah's birth anniversary, the Telangana armed peasant struggle began on this very day. On April 3rd, 1946, he was martyred, and from that moment forward, the Telangana armed peasant struggle commenced and continued until 1951. This struggle was waged against feudalism and the tyranny of the Nizam in Telangana, during which 4,000 people lost their lives. Thousands of villages were liberated from feudal lords — primarily zamindars, deshmuks, deshpandes, and patwardis. Approximately ten lakh acres of land were redistributed through this movement. When we compare the social and economic conditions of Telangana then with those of today, we find that the exploitation which existed then continues in much the same form today. While the nature of exploitation has evolved and people now speak with somewhat greater freedom, the Backward Classes (BCs) remain completely marginalized ...

What are the historical precedents for 'mosaic defence' strategies?

   From ancient empires to modern insurgencies   The concept of "Mosaic Defence"—fragmenting command, dispersing assets, and relying on a network of semi-autonomous nodes to survive decapitation—is not a modern invention. While the term is new, the  strategic logic  has appeared throughout history whenever a weaker power faced a stronger, centralized adversary. Here is an analysis of historical precedents for this strategy, ranging from ancient empires to modern insurgencies, and how they map onto Iran's current doctrine.   1. Ancient & Medieval Precedents: The "Scorched Earth" & Tribal Networks A. The Parthian Empire (247 BC – 224 AD) The Context:  The Parthians (in modern-day Iran) faced the Roman Empire, a superpower with superior legions and centralized command. The Strategy:  The Parthians did not hold fixed lines. They relied on a  decentralized feudal system  where local nobles (Satrap...

Is decentralization the future of all military strategy, or is it specific to weaker states facing stronger adversaries?

This writeup questions whether this is a universal trend or niche adaptation.  Is decentralization the future of all military strategy, or is it specific to weaker states facing stronger adversaries?  This is a profound strategic question that touches on the very evolution of warfare. The short answer is:  Decentralization is becoming a universal imperative, but the  degree  and  method  of decentralization differ based on power status. It is no longer just a niche adaptation for the weak; it is rapidly becoming the  dominant paradigm for all military powers , including the strongest (US, China, Russia, NATO). However, the motivations and implementations diverge significantly. Here is an analysis of whether decentralization is the future of  all  strategy or just a tool for the weak. 1. The Universal Driver: Why Everyone is Decentralizing Regardless of whether a state is strong or weak, three technological and strategic reali...