The search for order: understanding Hindu-Muslim violence in post-partition India

One distinguishing feature of mainstream social science is its growing regard for model building and formal hypothesis testing. In South Asian studies this is most evident in accounts of ethnic riots or communal violence. This paper examines a model of votes and violence proposed by Steven Wilkinson...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Corbridge, Stuart 1957- (Author)
Contributors: Kalra, Nikhila (Other) ; Tatsumi, Kayoko (Other)
Format: Print Article
Language:English
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Published: University of British Columbia 2012
In: Pacific affairs
Year: 2012, Volume: 85, Issue: 2, Pages: 287-312
Further subjects:B Vote
B Violence
B Social sciences
B India Intra-state conflict Konflikt zwischen Bevölkerungsgruppen Violent behavior Religiös motivierte Gewaltanwendung Hindus Muslime Bestimmungsfaktoren Social sciences Modell (theoretisch) Vote / Election
B Intra-state conflict
B Religion
B Hindus
B Election
B Muslim
B India
B Cause
B Violent behavior
B Model
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Summary:One distinguishing feature of mainstream social science is its growing regard for model building and formal hypothesis testing. In South Asian studies this is most evident in accounts of ethnic riots or communal violence. This paper examines a model of votes and violence proposed by Steven Wilkinson. We first examine how well the model performs against a data set that we have assembled on the twenty worst incidents of communal violence in India since 1950. The Wilkinson model is consistent with some important key facts in our data set, most notably in terms of levels of urbanization and “percentage Muslims” in riot-affected towns and cities. However, proximity to national or state elections is not found to be a strong driver of prolonged ethnic rioting. Nor is it the case that India’s worst instances of communal violence occurred mainly where there was direct electoral competition between less than 3.5 effective political parties, the other main predictive variable in the Wilkinson model. We then discuss the limitations more broadly of attempts to explain and even predict ethnic violence within the framework of a quantitative model. We pay attention to time inconsistencies, principal-agent problems, religiosity and the homogenization of riot events, and omitted variables (notably, memory work and ideological fervour). We conclude with some general remarks on the search for order in social science. (Pac Aff/GIGA)
ISSN:0030-851X
Contains:In: Pacific affairs