2011
DOI: 10.5958/j.2231-4547.1.2.010
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Social Exclusion among Muslims: A Case Study of Aligarh Lock Industry

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“…Paradoxically, the intervention of elected government has been witnessed as working for the cause of the business world, strengthening crony capitalism. Thus, globalization has added new dimensions to the vulnerability of India’s downtrodden by exacerbating their social exclusion and also making large segments of other social groups vulnerable and excluded (Nasir, 2011).…”
Section: ‘Vibrant Gujarat’ and Dalitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Paradoxically, the intervention of elected government has been witnessed as working for the cause of the business world, strengthening crony capitalism. Thus, globalization has added new dimensions to the vulnerability of India’s downtrodden by exacerbating their social exclusion and also making large segments of other social groups vulnerable and excluded (Nasir, 2011).…”
Section: ‘Vibrant Gujarat’ and Dalitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Harman 1977; S. Khan 2007; R. Robinson 2007;Gayer & Jaffrelot 2012;Shaban 2018). Accounts of Indian Muslim artisans are likewise dominated either by romanticised images of craftwork and a lost past of Mughal rule and patronage (Waheed 2006) or by notions of marginality, marginalisation, immobility and decline (Kumar 2017;Wilkinson-Weber 1999;Mohsini 2010;Nasir 2011). While scholarly and ethnographic research has offered highly nuanced accounts (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%