Assistant Professor, Special Centre for the Study of North East India, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
*Email id: g.amarjit@gmail.com
Online Published on 17 June, 2025.
Two significant concerns emerge from the developmental projects undertaken in India’s northeast region. First, development is essentially a centralized action, and there is a lack of people’s will in the decision-making process; second, there is not much space for the people to force changes in national and state government policies and acts. What does it mean to develop a region of postcolonial India? What is the specific trajectory of development as thought and action in a postcolonial region? This study, therefore, problematizes what developing a region means and the trajectory of state-guided capitalist development in the northeastern region of India. It looks at the objective and subjective nature of capitalist investment and development expansion. The developmental projects encounter protests, disagreements, and a complex social and political power milieu. Capitalist financing and development, while attempting to overcome such social and political barriers, deepen ethnic complexity and unleash environmental risks.
Capital, Developing, Expansion, Extraction, Postcolonial, Region
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