Agrarian Change Seminar: 'Protests against
the New Farm Laws in India'
Jan
31st, 2021, Vikas Rawal
In
the second half of 2020, while the country was struggling
with COVID-19 pandemic and impacts of a crippling 10-week
national lockdown, the Indian government enacted three
national laws related to agriculture. These laws created
a new national framework for contract farming, deregulated
agricultural marketing to open the doors for greater
corporate control, and reduced the scope of state intervention
for preventing excessive stocking of food commodities.
The laws were enacted in an unusually hasty manner and
without any discussion either with farmers or in the
Parliament. The laws have met with stiff resistance
from farmers. Protests erupted in various states, and
have been strongest in Punjab and Haryana. In November,
farmers took the battle to Delhi, breaking police barricades
and braving teargas shells and cold-water-cannon sprays.
Battling the bitter north Indian winter and the COVID-19
pandemic, which have taken lives of about 50 protesting
farmers already, a historic number of peasants are protesting
at different entry points to the national capital. Led
by an umbrella platform of a large number of peasant
organisations, farmers have made it clear that they
will not settle for anything less than repealing of
the three laws. The presentation will mainly deal with
three questions. Why are farmers opposing these laws?
What is the social and class basis of this resistance?
And what is the potential of this resistance for bringing
about a change in the direction of state policies?
Vikas Rawal is Professor of Economics at the Centre
for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru
University, New Delhi. His main research interests are
in the area of food and agriculture. His research encompasses
detailed field-based studies across many States of India,
large-scale macro-level studies for India, as well as
work that looks at global issues in the area of food
and agriculture. Apart from having visited and lectured
at many universities, he has also been a Senior Consultant
for Governance of Agriculture, Food Security, Nutrition
and Rural Development at the Food and Agriculture Oganization
of the UN. His recent books include Ending Malnutrition:
from Commitment to Action (co-authored and published
by FAO) and The Global Economy of Pulses (co-edited
and published by FAO).
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