Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Fragmented Countryside: Caste Hegemony, Khap Authority and the Crisis of Democratic Mobilisation in Northern India

 From Mirchpur to the Farmers' Movement: Identity, Rural Power and the Political Economy of Division

By Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

Northern India has witnessed some of the country's largest democratic mobilisations—from peasant struggles and reservation movements to nationwide farmers' agitations. Yet, despite recurring economic crises affecting cultivators, agricultural labourers and rural workers alike, these movements have seldom evolved into durable democratic coalitions capable of transforming electoral politics. Instead, they have repeatedly fragmented along caste, community and regional lines. This essay argues that the explanation lies not merely in electoral competition or ideological differences but in the enduring authority of rural social institutions that organise political consciousness through inherited identities rather than shared material interests.

Using Haryana as the principal case study while drawing comparisons with western Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and other regions of northern India, this study examines the historical evolution of dominant agrarian castes, the socio-political role of khap institutions, and the interaction between caste authority and modern electoral mobilisation. It analyses episodes such as the Mirchpur violence, the Bhagana displacement, the Jat reservation agitations, communal realignments in western Uttar Pradesh, and the 2020–21 farmers' movement to demonstrate how moments of broad democratic solidarity frequently dissolve when older structures of social hierarchy are reactivated.

The paper further contends that modern political parties have increasingly learned to operate within these inherited social structures rather than replacing them, while organisations attempting to mobilise citizens around common economic interests face structural disadvantages. Consequently, democratic mobilisation remains episodic whereas identity-based political alignments reproduce themselves with remarkable resilience.

The essay concludes that the principal contradiction of northern Indian politics lies in the coexistence of common economic interests with deeply unequal social relationships. Unless democratic movements develop organisational forms capable of transcending inherited hierarchies without ignoring them, agrarian mobilisation will continue to remain politically fragmented despite recurring economic crises.


"A society rarely fragments because its people have different economic interests; it fragments because they are persuaded that inherited identities matter more than shared futures."

The Paradox of Democratic Mobilisation in Northern India

Few regions in South Asia present a political paradox as striking as the northern Indian plains. Stretching from Haryana through western Uttar Pradesh and into Rajasthan and parts of Madhya Pradesh, this landscape has historically been one of agricultural abundance, peasant assertion and political participation. The Green Revolution transformed many of these districts into some of the most productive agrarian economies in the country. The villages of this region have produced soldiers, wrestlers, political leaders, bureaucrats and some of India's most influential farmer organisations. Yet they have also witnessed recurrent episodes of caste violence, social exclusion and communal polarisation that appear, at first glance, to contradict their deeply intertwined social and economic lives.

The contradiction is particularly visible in Haryana. Here, agriculture continues to bind together cultivators, tenant farmers, artisans, agricultural labourers and service castes within a common rural economy. Their livelihoods depend upon the same monsoon, the same markets, the same irrigation systems and the same state policies governing procurement, electricity, credit and land. Yet when moments of collective mobilisation emerge around these common material concerns, they often prove fragile. Economic solidarity repeatedly gives way to social fragmentation. Villages that march together demanding remunerative prices, irrigation or debt relief may later become divided over caste disputes, reservation policies or local conflicts. Democratic unity appears temporary, whereas inherited social identities demonstrate remarkable durability.

This paradox has become increasingly significant since the implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations in the early 1990s and the simultaneous expansion of identity-based electoral politics. Liberalisation altered the economic foundations of rural India, exposing cultivators to volatile markets and declining public investment, while political competition increasingly relied upon the construction and management of social coalitions. Rural politics thus came to operate through two parallel logics. One emerged from economic life, encouraging cooperation around shared agrarian interests. The other derived from historical social hierarchies, encouraging mobilisation through caste, kinship and community identities. These two logics frequently intersected, competed and undermined one another.

This essay seeks to understand why the second has so often prevailed over the first.

The central argument advanced here is that democratic mobilisation in northern India cannot be understood solely through electoral arithmetic, economic distress or ideological competition. It must also be analysed through the enduring authority of rural institutions that organise political life beyond the formal structures of the state. Among these institutions, khap panchayats and caste councils occupy a particularly significant position in several regions. Historically functioning as mechanisms of social regulation, dispute resolution and community organisation, they continue to exercise influence over collective opinion and social legitimacy. Their authority extends beyond customary practices into the political sphere, where they often shape the language through which grievances are interpreted and collective action is organised.

This argument does not suggest that khaps are uniform organisations, that all caste leaders act identically, or that rural communities are permanently locked into conflict. Nor does it deny that khaps have, at different moments, supported progressive causes, including campaigns against social evils or, in some instances, participation in farmers' agitations. Rather, the essay examines the structural role these institutions can play when social conflicts arise, and how inherited hierarchies may impede the formation of broader democratic solidarities.

The discussion is therefore not about the morality of particular communities but about the political consequences of historically embedded structures of authority. Throughout modern history, dominant agrarian castes have simultaneously occupied multiple positions: cultivators, local elites, political intermediaries and custodians of customary institutions. These overlapping roles have enabled them to exercise influence far beyond their numerical strength. Political parties of different ideological persuasions have often sought to negotiate with, incorporate or mobilise these structures in pursuit of electoral advantage. The precise forms have varied across time and place, but the broader pattern—the interaction between social hierarchy and electoral strategy—has remained remarkably persistent.

The consequences extend beyond elections. Organisations attempting to mobilise farmers, agricultural labourers and rural workers around common economic interests frequently confront inherited social divisions that predate modern democratic politics. Trade unions, peasant organisations and labour associations must therefore negotiate a terrain already structured by caste authority. When moments of economic unity emerge, they remain vulnerable to fragmentation if unresolved social inequalities are reactivated.

The events of the twenty-first century vividly illustrate this contradiction. The farmers' movement of 2020–21 represented one of the largest democratic mobilisations in independent India, sustaining an extraordinary coalition of cultivators across regions and states for more than a year. Yet the movement's remarkable unity did not automatically translate into enduring political realignment. Similarly, episodes of caste violence, reservation agitations and communal tensions have repeatedly demonstrated the resilience of identity-based mobilisation even among communities sharing common economic interests.

Understanding this contradiction requires moving beyond simplistic explanations that attribute rural politics solely to economic rationality or, conversely, to immutable cultural traditions. Rural society is neither an economically homogeneous class nor a timeless cultural community. It is a historically evolving social formation in which economic interests, political institutions and inherited hierarchies continuously interact. The village is simultaneously a site of production, social reproduction and political negotiation.

The chapters that follow explore this interaction through historical analysis, case studies and comparative discussion. Rather than viewing caste and class as mutually exclusive categories, the essay examines how they intersect in shaping democratic possibilities. It argues that the persistence of social hierarchy does not merely coexist with economic inequality; it actively influences how economic grievances are organised, interpreted and represented. Consequently, the fragmentation of democratic mobilisation is not an accidental failure but a recurring outcome of deeper structural relationships within rural society.

"The most enduring victories in politics are rarely won by changing people's interests; they are won by redefining their identities."

The Village Republic That Never Was

Few ideas have exercised greater influence over the imagination of rural India than the notion of the self-sufficient village republic. Celebrated in colonial writings, nationalist discourse and popular memory alike, the Indian village has often been portrayed as a harmonious community united by shared traditions and mutual dependence. This romantic image suggests that rural society functioned through cooperation, collective responsibility and organic solidarity, disturbed only by external interventions such as colonial rule, industrialisation or modern politics.

Historical evidence presents a far more complex reality.

The northern Indian village was indeed a remarkably durable institution, but its durability rested not upon social equality but upon carefully organised hierarchies. Land ownership, occupational specialisation, ritual status and political authority were distributed unevenly among different communities. Agricultural production required cooperation, yet that cooperation unfolded within relationships marked by unequal access to land, resources and decision-making. The village was therefore neither a republic in the democratic sense nor a collection of isolated households. It was a structured social order in which interdependence coexisted with hierarchy.

Long before the emergence of electoral democracy, rural authority operated through multiple institutions: kinship networks, lineage organisations, customary councils and caste assemblies. These institutions regulated marriage, inheritance, access to common resources, dispute resolution and collective security. Their legitimacy rested less upon written law than upon shared social recognition. While they often enabled cooperation and local governance, they also reinforced distinctions between dominant and subordinate groups.

The Green Revolution, expanding markets and democratic politics transformed many aspects of rural life but did not eliminate these inherited structures. Instead, traditional authority adapted to new circumstances. Electoral competition, agricultural prosperity and state welfare programmes increasingly interacted with pre-existing networks of kinship and caste. Political leadership frequently emerged from those already occupying influential positions within rural society. Thus, rather than replacing customary authority, modern democracy often incorporated it into new institutional forms.

This historical continuity helps explain why contemporary democratic mobilisation in the countryside remains deeply shaped by older social relationships. Economic change has altered livelihoods, technologies and markets, yet social legitimacy continues to be mediated through institutions whose origins predate the modern state. Understanding this persistence is essential to explaining both the strengths and the limitations of democratic politics in northern India.

The Making of Dominant Castes: Land, State and the Social Reproduction of Rural Power

"Political authority in rural India has rarely emerged from elections alone; it has historically rested upon the control of land, kinship and legitimacy."

The dominance of certain agrarian castes across northern India is neither an accident of demography nor merely the outcome of electoral politics. It is the product of a long historical process in which land ownership, military service, colonial administration, agricultural modernisation and democratic representation gradually converged to create a class of rural elites whose influence extended far beyond agriculture. Understanding this historical evolution is essential because the contemporary political behaviour of these communities cannot be separated from the institutional advantages accumulated over generations.

The dominant agrarian communities of northern India—including Jats in Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan; Rajputs across Rajasthan and parts of Uttar Pradesh; Gujjars in western India and north India; Ahirs or Yadavs in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar; Marathas in Maharashtra; Patidars in Gujarat; and Vokkaligas and Lingayats in Karnataka—share significant structural similarities despite important regional differences. They historically occupied intermediate positions within the social hierarchy. Unlike priestly elites, they exercised authority through land rather than ritual. Unlike landless labourers, they possessed productive assets, local influence and organisational cohesion. Their political power thus originated from the countryside itself.

This historical location allowed these communities to emerge as mediators between the state and rural society. During colonial rule, revenue settlements, canal irrigation projects and military recruitment often reinforced the authority of landed cultivators. In Punjab Province, from which modern Haryana emerged, canal colonies transformed sections of the agrarian landscape into highly productive regions. Communities recognised as "agricultural tribes" gained privileged access to land, military employment and administrative recognition. These policies did not create dominant castes from nothing, but they strengthened existing hierarchies by institutionalising differential access to economic resources.

The Green Revolution further accelerated this process. Public investment in irrigation, procurement, fertilisers and agricultural technology disproportionately benefited regions already possessing relatively larger landholdings and better infrastructure. Prosperity produced new educational opportunities, facilitated entry into bureaucracy and politics, and enabled rural elites to diversify into transport, real estate, contracting and cooperative institutions. The village headman increasingly became not merely an agricultural leader but also a political broker, educational patron and intermediary with the expanding developmental state.

Importantly, dominance should not be understood as absolute privilege enjoyed equally by all members of a caste. Large inequalities exist within every agrarian community. Small and marginal farmers belonging to dominant castes frequently experience indebtedness, unemployment and declining agricultural profitability. Yet these economic differences coexist with a shared symbolic status derived from historical social authority. This distinction between internal economic differentiation and collective political identity explains why economically distressed cultivators may continue to identify with community leadership even when their material interests diverge from local elites.

The persistence of this symbolic authority owes much to kinship institutions. Extended lineage networks, clan identities and customary organisations provide mechanisms through which dispersed rural populations maintain collective identities across villages and districts. These networks facilitate cooperation during marriages, disputes, elections and social movements. They also enable rapid political mobilisation because communication travels through pre-existing channels of trust and obligation rather than through formal organisational structures.

Democratic politics did not weaken these networks; in many respects, it expanded their importance. Universal adult franchise transformed numerical strength into electoral significance. Communities possessing extensive organisational cohesion became attractive partners for political parties seeking stable vote banks. Consequently, caste associations increasingly acquired explicitly political functions. Leaders who had once mediated disputes or organised social gatherings began negotiating electoral alliances, influencing candidate selection and shaping public opinion.

This transformation produced a significant shift in rural leadership. Traditional authority became intertwined with representative democracy without becoming subordinate to it. Elections did not replace customary legitimacy; they often reinforced it. Political office enhanced social prestige, while social prestige facilitated electoral success. The two sources of authority entered into a mutually reinforcing relationship.

Yet this evolution also produced contradictions. The same communities that had historically led agrarian struggles against colonial rule and later championed farmers' interests also remained embedded within hierarchical village structures that often marginalised landless labourers and historically disadvantaged communities. Economic leadership and social conservatism could therefore coexist within the same political formation.

This contradiction lies at the heart of northern India's democratic dilemma. Dominant agrarian castes frequently articulated the language of peasant rights while simultaneously preserving local social hierarchies. Consequently, democratic mobilisation around agricultural issues remained vulnerable whenever questions of caste equality, reservation or social justice entered public debate. Material solidarity encountered inherited structures of social authority that could not easily be dissolved through economic cooperation alone.

The significance of this contradiction became increasingly visible after the 1990s. Economic liberalisation exposed cultivators to market uncertainties, while the implementation of the Mandal Commission intensified political competition around representation and reservation. The resulting transformations altered the terrain upon which caste identities operated. Communities that had once viewed themselves primarily as prosperous cultivators increasingly articulated claims based upon relative deprivation, political marginalisation or competitive backwardness. Simultaneously, historically oppressed communities expanded their own political assertions through constitutional rights, educational access and democratic representation.

Northern India's countryside thus entered a new phase in which older hierarchies interacted with newer aspirations. Political competition no longer revolved solely around land or agricultural production; it increasingly concerned recognition, dignity, reservation and symbolic representation. The countryside became not merely an economic landscape but an arena in which multiple historical grievances intersected.

The institutions that mediated these tensions would assume unprecedented importance.

"Land creates wealth, but institutions determine who converts wealth into authority."

Khap Authority and the Architecture of Rural Power

Few institutions in northern India generate as much public debate as the khap panchayat. Often portrayed either as relics of medieval conservatism or as authentic expressions of indigenous self-governance, khaps have become symbols through which broader arguments concerning tradition, democracy and social change are conducted. Both portrayals, however, are incomplete. To understand their political significance, one must examine them not as isolated organisations but as enduring structures of social authority whose influence has adapted to changing historical circumstances.

Historically, khaps emerged as federations of villages organised around clan affiliations, territorial proximity or lineage networks. Long before the establishment of modern administrative institutions, they coordinated collective responses to security threats, regulated access to common resources, mediated disputes and enforced customary norms. Their authority derived less from legal sanction than from social legitimacy. Compliance depended upon recognition by constituent communities rather than coercive state power.

This historical role should not be dismissed. In periods characterised by weak state penetration, local institutions often performed essential administrative functions. They facilitated coordination among dispersed settlements, organised irrigation, negotiated inter-village conflicts and maintained social order. Many rural communities continue to remember these contributions as evidence of collective self-governance.

Yet every institution embodies particular social relationships. Khaps developed within societies structured by hierarchy. Consequently, their decisions frequently reflected prevailing distributions of power. Their legitimacy rested upon consensus among those recognised as legitimate participants within customary authority rather than universal democratic participation. Women, landless labourers and historically subordinated communities often possessed limited influence within these decision-making processes.

The expansion of constitutional democracy fundamentally altered this institutional environment. Independent India's legal framework transferred formal authority over justice, administration and governance to elected bodies and judicial institutions. Nevertheless, customary organisations did not disappear. Instead, they increasingly occupied an informal sphere where questions of honour, marriage, social discipline and community representation continued to be negotiated.

Their political significance gradually expanded for another reason. Electoral competition rewarded organisational capacity. Political parties discovered that institutions capable of influencing large rural constituencies possessed considerable strategic value. Leaders associated with khaps therefore acquired roles extending beyond customary dispute resolution into electoral mobilisation, candidate endorsement and public negotiation. While khaps themselves are diverse and cannot be treated as politically uniform, their social influence became an important resource within competitive democratic politics.

This transformation produced an institutional duality. Formally, sovereignty belonged to constitutional institutions. Informally, social legitimacy continued to circulate through customary networks. Politicians seeking electoral success frequently operated within both spheres simultaneously. Government policies required legal implementation, yet their acceptance often depended upon negotiations with influential community leaders capable of shaping local opinion.

The implications for democratic mobilisation proved profound. Organisations attempting to unite cultivators, agricultural labourers and rural workers around shared economic demands entered a political field already structured by pre-existing authorities. Unlike trade unions or farmers' organisations, which required continuous organisational work, khap networks could mobilise through inherited social relationships. Their organisational infrastructure predated modern political parties and often extended across numerous villages.

This does not imply that khaps consistently opposed democratic mobilisation. During several agrarian struggles, including phases of the recent farmers' movement, sections of khap leadership supported sustained protests against agricultural legislation. Their organisational capacity contributed to maintaining discipline, logistics and communication. Such participation demonstrates that khaps cannot be reduced to singular political functions.

The crucial analytical question, however, concerns the conditions under which these institutions mobilise different identities. When political conflicts revolve around agricultural prices, irrigation or procurement, khap networks may facilitate broad rural cooperation. When disputes acquire caste or community dimensions, the same organisational capacities may reinforce narrower solidarities. The institutional mechanism remains similar; the political identity being mobilised changes.

This flexibility explains both the resilience and the ambiguity of customary authority. Social institutions capable of generating collective action around economic grievances may also reproduce inherited hierarchies during caste conflicts. Their effectiveness arises precisely because they possess deep reservoirs of social legitimacy accumulated across generations.

Modern democratic organisations face a structural disadvantage in this context. Farmers' unions, labour associations and progressive movements must construct solidarity through persuasion, ideological work and organisational discipline. Khap networks inherit solidarity through kinship, memory and customary obligation. Consequently, democratic mobilisation often requires overcoming rather than simply utilising existing social relationships.

The contradiction becomes especially visible during episodes of caste conflict. Villages sharing common economic interests may rapidly polarise when historical social divisions are activated. Individuals who had previously cooperated as cultivators become representatives of antagonistic communities. Economic rationality yields to symbolic identity because the latter is embedded within everyday social life through marriage networks, kinship obligations and local prestige.

This recurring transformation from economic cooperation to identity-based mobilisation constitutes one of the central puzzles of northern Indian politics. It cannot be explained merely through electoral strategy or ideological propaganda. Rather, it reflects the continuing influence of institutions whose authority was historically constituted outside modern democratic frameworks but has successfully adapted to them.

The following chapters examine this process through concrete historical episodes. The violence at Mirchpur, the displacement of Dalit communities from Bhagana, the Jat reservation agitations, and the communal realignments in western Uttar Pradesh reveal not isolated events but recurring patterns in which inherited structures of authority interact with contemporary political competition. Together, they illuminate the deeper contradiction between democratic citizenship and historically embedded social power.

Mirchpur (2010): Violence, Social Boycott and the Limits of Rural Democracy

"The deepest fracture in a democracy is not merely violence; it is the normalisation of unequal citizenship."

No understanding of contemporary Haryana can remain complete without examining the events that unfolded in Mirchpur village in Hisar district during April 2010. The incident did not merely expose the brutality of caste violence; it revealed the fragile foundations upon which democratic citizenship continues to rest in sections of rural India. More importantly, it demonstrated how everyday local disputes can rapidly transform into collective confrontations when mediated through entrenched social hierarchies.

The immediate trigger of the conflict appeared trivial—a dispute involving a pet dog belonging to members of the dominant Jat community and children from the Dalit settlement. Such seemingly minor disputes are not uncommon in village life. Yet sociological inquiry repeatedly shows that violence rarely originates from the immediate event itself. Rather, everyday incidents acquire explosive potential because they activate deeper structures of power, prestige and social control that have accumulated over decades.

The escalation that followed in Mirchpur illustrated precisely this phenomenon. Houses belonging to Dalit residents were attacked and set ablaze. During the violence, a physically disabled teenage girl, Suman, and her elderly father, Tara Chand, died after being trapped in a burning house. Numerous families fled the village, many never returning permanently. The incident attracted national attention not simply because of its brutality but because it challenged the widespread belief that constitutional equality had fundamentally transformed rural social relations.

Subsequent judicial proceedings recognised the seriousness of the offences. The case travelled through multiple legal stages, involving investigation, transfer of trial and convictions under criminal law and legislation relating to atrocities against Scheduled Castes. Yet the legal process, important as it was, addressed only individual criminal liability. It could not by itself resolve the broader social rupture that the violence had produced.

The displacement of Dalit families revealed another dimension of caste conflict often overlooked in legal discourse. Physical violence ends within hours or days; social displacement may continue for generations. Villagers who lose homes frequently lose far more than property. They lose neighbourhood networks, economic relationships, access to agricultural employment, educational continuity and a sense of belonging. In effect, displacement becomes a restructuring of citizenship itself.

The significance of Mirchpur therefore lies less in its uniqueness than in what it represents. It exposed how democratic institutions coexist with customary hierarchies that continue to regulate everyday life. Elections may produce political equality at the ballot box, yet social interactions remain mediated through unequal relationships of status, land ownership and local authority.

Another aspect deserves careful attention. The public mobilisation that followed the incident reflected competing understandings of justice. Human rights organisations, Dalit groups and constitutional activists framed the violence as a question of equal citizenship and protection of fundamental rights. Simultaneously, sections of the dominant community perceived the legal intervention as collective stigmatisation rather than individual accountability. These competing narratives transformed a criminal investigation into a wider political controversy.

This transformation illustrates an important sociological mechanism. Once identity becomes the principal framework through which an event is interpreted, questions of individual responsibility frequently become subordinated to collective honour. The defence of community prestige begins to overshadow the pursuit of justice. Political actors often enter precisely at this stage, interpreting local conflicts through broader electoral narratives and thereby expanding their political significance.

Mirchpur thus became more than a village tragedy. It became an illustration of how local hierarchies, electoral competition and identity politics interact to reshape democratic discourse. Instead of producing sustained reflection on structural inequalities within rural society, public debate gradually polarised around competing community narratives. The possibility of broader democratic dialogue diminished accordingly.

This pattern would reappear in subsequent conflicts across Haryana.

"Violence is often remembered as an event. Sociology asks us to remember the structure that made the event possible."

Bhagana, Harsola and the Politics of Social Exclusion

Mirchpur was neither the beginning nor the end of caste-based tensions in Haryana. During the following decade, several villages witnessed disputes that, although differing in immediate circumstances, displayed recurring structural characteristics. Among them, Bhagana in Hisar district occupies particular significance because it revealed the complex interaction between local political competition, access to common resources, caste hierarchy and democratic representation.

The conflict in Bhagana emerged against the backdrop of disputes concerning village common land, local governance and political representation. Dalit residents alleged systematic discrimination, intimidation and social exclusion following panchayat elections and disagreements over access to public resources. As tensions intensified, numerous families left the village and established temporary settlements elsewhere, including prolonged protests demanding state intervention.

Like Mirchpur, Bhagana demonstrated that displacement had become an increasingly visible feature of caste conflict. Migration from villages was not driven solely by fear of immediate violence but by the perceived impossibility of living under conditions where everyday social and economic interactions had broken down. Rural citizenship depends heavily upon access to shared institutions—schools, employment, water sources, markets and neighbourhood relations. Once these relationships collapse, formal legal rights alone often prove insufficient to restore ordinary life.

The symbolic significance of Bhagana extended beyond Haryana because it challenged developmental narratives that associated economic growth with declining social inequality. Haryana ranked among India's wealthiest agricultural states. Its villages possessed better roads, irrigation systems and educational infrastructure than many other regions. Yet economic advancement had not automatically transformed social relationships. Material prosperity and social exclusion continued to coexist.

The episode also revealed limitations within democratic institutions themselves. Panchayati Raj had undoubtedly expanded electoral participation and representation. However, electoral democracy cannot entirely neutralise historically unequal distributions of social power. Individuals formally equal as voters may continue to possess vastly unequal capacities to influence local decision-making. Consequently, electoral competition sometimes intensifies rather than resolves underlying social conflicts.

Harsola and similar disputes across Haryana further reinforce this broader pattern. While each village possesses its own history, recurring themes emerge repeatedly: disputes over common resources, assertions of dignity by historically marginalised communities, reactions from sections of dominant castes, administrative intervention, legal proceedings and prolonged social fragmentation.

It would nevertheless be analytically mistaken to portray every dominant caste member as an oppressor or every marginalised community as politically homogeneous. Rural society is internally diverse. Significant voices advocating reconciliation, constitutional values and peaceful coexistence exist within all communities. The persistence of conflict should therefore be understood institutionally rather than morally. Certain social arrangements repeatedly create incentives for collective mobilisation around identity whenever local authority appears threatened.

These episodes also expose the limitations of purely legal approaches to social transformation. Courts may punish criminal acts; governments may provide compensation; police may restore order. Yet none of these interventions automatically reconstructs trust among neighbours. Democratic citizenship requires not merely legal equality but also social recognition. Where one remains absent, the other struggles to achieve lasting effectiveness.

For democratic organisations attempting to mobilise cultivators and labourers around common economic issues, these conflicts generate additional difficulties. Shared struggles over minimum support prices, agricultural credit or employment become secondary whenever communities carry unresolved memories of violence, displacement or humiliation. Historical grievances accumulate, reducing the possibility of sustained cross-caste solidarity.

Consequently, movements organised around economic demands repeatedly encounter social fractures inherited from earlier conflicts. These fractures constitute perhaps the greatest obstacle to the emergence of broad-based democratic coalitions in northern India.

"Every displaced village carries two histories: one recorded in official files, the other preserved in collective memory."

Reservation, Relative Deprivation and the Jat Agitations

The implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations fundamentally transformed Indian politics. For the first time since Independence, questions of representation, backwardness and social justice became central to national political discourse. While the constitutional objective was to expand opportunities for historically disadvantaged communities, the political consequences proved considerably more complex. The language of social justice increasingly intersected with competitive identity politics, generating new aspirations as well as new anxieties.

Among several dominant agrarian communities, including sections of the Jats in Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, demands for inclusion within reservation frameworks gradually acquired political momentum. These demands did not arise solely from cultural identity. They reflected changing economic conditions within agriculture itself. Rising cultivation costs, shrinking landholdings due to inheritance, declining profitability and limited non-farm employment generated growing insecurity among younger generations.

This transformation marked an important shift in political consciousness. Communities historically associated with agrarian prosperity increasingly articulated narratives of relative deprivation. The comparison was no longer between cultivators and landless labourers but between different categories of state recognition. Reservation became not merely a policy instrument but also a symbolic language through which changing economic realities were interpreted.

The Jat reservation agitations therefore embodied multiple contradictions simultaneously. On one level, they expressed genuine concerns regarding employment, education and declining agrarian opportunities. On another level, they activated powerful community identities capable of mobilising large numbers of people across districts. Economic anxiety and symbolic solidarity reinforced one another.

However, the political consequences extended beyond the reservation question itself. Large-scale mobilisation inevitably altered relationships between communities. Groups already benefiting from reservation sometimes perceived new demands as threats to existing opportunities. Sections of non-Jat communities interpreted the agitations through the lens of political dominance rather than economic distress. Consequently, debates over public policy increasingly acquired competitive caste dimensions.

This transformation proved electorally significant. Political parties recognised that expanding social polarisation created opportunities for constructing alternative electoral coalitions. Communities historically divided by local rivalries could be brought together through broader narratives emphasising security, representation or identity. Conversely, communities previously united around agrarian concerns became internally fragmented.

The reservation agitations thus represented more than demands for policy change. They revealed how economic grievances could be reorganised through inherited social identities, producing political outcomes extending far beyond the original issue. The language of livelihood gradually merged with the language of community.

It is precisely at this intersection that the principal contradiction of northern India's democratic politics becomes visible. Economic distress affects cultivators across caste boundaries, yet political mobilisation frequently proceeds through community rather than occupational identity. As long as this contradiction persists, democratic movements organised around common material interests will remain vulnerable to fragmentation.

Western Uttar Pradesh: From Agrarian Brotherhood to Communal Polarisation

"History seldom changes villages overnight. What changes first is the language through which neighbours begin to understand one another."

If Haryana represents the laboratory of caste politics in northern India, western Uttar Pradesh illustrates the transformation of agrarian society through communal realignment. For decades, the districts stretching from Meerut through Muzaffarnagar, Shamli, Baghpat, Saharanpur and Kairana represented one of India's most integrated rural societies. Agricultural prosperity, canal irrigation, sugarcane cultivation and military recruitment produced a remarkably interconnected rural economy. More importantly, this region had historically sustained extensive social interaction between Jat Hindus and Muslim cultivators.

Many Muslim agricultural families in western Uttar Pradesh shared common clan lineages with Hindu Jats. Numerous communities locally identified themselves through gotras that predated religious conversion. The expression "Mulla Jat," though varying across local contexts, reflected this historical memory of common agrarian ancestry rather than merely religious identity. Shared dialects, agricultural practices, kinship conventions and village life produced a social landscape where religious difference did not automatically translate into political antagonism.

This historical coexistence becomes particularly significant when contrasted with the violence of the twentieth century. During the Partition of 1947, western Uttar Pradesh experienced disturbances but avoided the scale of communal massacres witnessed in Punjab. While migration and violence certainly occurred, many mixed villages continued functioning without irreversible rupture. Local agrarian relationships often moderated communal tensions because economic interdependence remained substantial.

This relative stability did not imply the absence of discrimination or conflict. Disputes over land, local elections and personal rivalries certainly existed. However, these conflicts generally remained localised rather than becoming region-wide communal mobilisations. Political competition revolved primarily around agrarian interests, caste equations and regional leadership.

The transformation became increasingly visible after the 1990s. Economic liberalisation altered rural employment patterns. Younger generations became more dependent upon education, government employment and migration. Simultaneously, religious mobilisation acquired unprecedented political visibility across northern India. National political narratives increasingly entered village life through expanding media, improved transportation and intensified electoral competition.

The Muzaffarnagar violence of 2013 marked a decisive rupture in this historical trajectory. Triggered by local criminal incidents but rapidly expanding into widespread communal violence, the conflict displaced thousands of people and fundamentally altered political relationships across western Uttar Pradesh. Villages that had previously organised jointly around sugarcane prices, irrigation and cooperative institutions now found themselves divided along religious lines.

Scholars continue to debate the precise causes of the violence. Some emphasise local disputes; others highlight failures of administration; still others examine the role of political mobilisation, rumours and media narratives. Whatever the combination of causes, the consequences proved unmistakable. Agrarian identities that had previously transcended religious boundaries weakened considerably as communal identities acquired greater political salience.

This transformation had profound electoral implications. Communities previously capable of cooperating around economic issues increasingly viewed one another through the framework of religious security. Political competition shifted from debates over agricultural policy towards broader narratives concerning identity, nationhood and community protection. The electoral consequences extended well beyond western Uttar Pradesh, influencing political strategies across northern India.

The significance of this transformation lies not merely in communal violence itself but in its long-term impact upon democratic mobilisation. Farmer organisations attempting to unite cultivators across religious lines now confronted memories of violence, displacement and mistrust. Shared economic grievances remained real, but the social foundations necessary for collective political action had become significantly weaker.

The western Uttar Pradesh experience demonstrates a broader sociological principle. Economic interests do not automatically generate political unity. They require social trust. Where trust deteriorates through sustained identity-based polarisation, material interests alone rarely succeed in reconstructing durable democratic coalitions.

"Agrarian cooperation depends upon more than common crops; it depends upon neighbours believing they share a common future."

The Political Economy of Identity: Why Material Interests Repeatedly Yield to Social Identities

One of the most persistent puzzles in political sociology concerns the apparent contradiction between objective economic interests and actual political behaviour. Farmers facing declining profitability frequently support competing political formations. Agricultural labourers experiencing similar hardships often identify more strongly with caste or religious organisations than with labour unions. Communities sharing identical market conditions may become political adversaries rather than allies.

This phenomenon is neither irrational nor uniquely Indian. Throughout modern history, societies have repeatedly demonstrated that human beings act through identities as much as through economic calculations. Political behaviour emerges not simply from material conditions but from the meanings people attach to those conditions.

In northern India, caste functions as one of the principal frameworks through which economic experiences acquire political interpretation. A decline in agricultural income may be understood not merely as an economic problem but as evidence of declining community status. Unemployment may become interpreted through narratives of reservation, representation or historical injustice rather than broader structural transformations affecting the rural economy as a whole.

Political entrepreneurs across ideological traditions recognise this tendency. Successful electoral mobilisation rarely invents identities from nothing; instead, it activates existing social affiliations possessing deep historical legitimacy. Caste organisations, religious institutions, kinship networks and local leadership therefore become politically valuable because they already command social trust unavailable to newly created organisations.

This process explains why organisations attempting to mobilise around universal economic interests often encounter structural disadvantages. Trade unions must persuade individuals to identify primarily as workers. Farmer organisations must encourage cultivators to think collectively as producers. These identities require continuous organisational effort because they compete against inherited identities acquired through family, marriage, neighbourhood and everyday socialisation.

Identity, therefore, possesses a cumulative advantage.

Children inherit caste before they understand markets.

They inherit religion before they understand public policy.

They inherit kinship before they join political organisations.

By adulthood, these identities have already structured much of their social world.

Economic organisations must therefore construct solidarity where identity-based institutions inherit it.

This distinction helps explain why democratic mobilisation frequently appears spectacular during crises yet difficult to sustain afterward. Extraordinary events temporarily suspend ordinary social divisions. Once the immediate crisis subsides, inherited identities gradually reassert themselves through everyday social interactions.

The farmers' movement demonstrated precisely this phenomenon.

For more than thirteen months, farmers from Punjab, Haryana, western Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and other states sustained one of independent India's largest democratic protests. Shared opposition to the three farm laws generated unprecedented cooperation among diverse communities. Women participated in unprecedented numbers. Religious institutions provided food. Student organisations, labour unions and civil society groups contributed logistical support. The movement displayed remarkable organisational discipline and moral legitimacy.

Yet its very success concealed a deeper contradiction.

The movement temporarily suspended—but did not eliminate—the social hierarchies existing within rural society.

Its principal unifying demand concerned agricultural legislation rather than restructuring village social relations.

Consequently, when the immediate objective was achieved through the repeal of the farm laws, the organisational glue binding together diverse communities weakened.

The inherited social order remained largely unchanged.

This distinction between temporary political unity and permanent social transformation is central to understanding contemporary northern Indian politics.

"Movements can unite people around demands. Only social transformation can permanently alter the identities through which those demands are understood."

The Farmers' Movement: A Democratic Triumph and a Political Paradox

The 2020–21 farmers' movement occupies a unique place in the democratic history of independent India. Rarely has a social movement sustained such extraordinary organisational resilience against a determined central government. For over thirteen months, tens of thousands of cultivators maintained continuous protest on the borders of the national capital. Despite severe weather, prolonged negotiations and intense political contestation, the movement preserved remarkable internal discipline.

Its eventual success—the repeal of the three farm laws—represented one of the most significant instances in recent decades of sustained democratic pressure compelling a major policy reversal by the Union Government.

Yet the movement also produced one of contemporary Indian politics' greatest paradoxes.

How could a movement that achieved such unprecedented unity fail to produce an equally enduring political realignment?

The answer cannot be found simply in electoral strategy.

Nor can it be explained solely through campaign resources or leadership differences.

Rather, the explanation lies in the distinction between mobilisation and organisation.

Mobilisation brings together people confronting a common immediate problem.

Organisation constructs institutions capable of preserving solidarity after the immediate crisis has ended.

The Samyukt Kisan Morcha achieved the former magnificently.

The latter proved substantially more difficult.

Once the legislative objective disappeared, participants returned to villages structured by pre-existing social relationships. There they resumed identities not only as cultivators but also as members of different castes, religions, clans and local political factions. Electoral politics subsequently re-entered these villages through exactly those social institutions that had remained largely dormant during the agitation.

The consequence was not the failure of the movement.

On the contrary, the movement achieved precisely its declared objective.

The deeper limitation lay elsewhere.

Economic unity had not fundamentally transformed the social architecture of rural politics.

Political parties therefore re-engaged with voters through existing identity networks whose organisational foundations remained intact.

The democratic movement demonstrated the enormous potential of issue-based mobilisation.

The subsequent elections demonstrated the continuing resilience of identity-based political organisation.

Neither reality negates the other.

Together they reveal the principal contradiction of democratic politics in northern India.

From the Village to the Ballot: Identity, Electoral Politics and the Reconfiguration of Rural Power

"Political parties do not create social divisions from nothing; successful parties learn to organise the divisions that history has already produced."

One of the most significant transformations in Indian politics since the 1990s has been the changing relationship between rural society and electoral democracy. Earlier phases of politics in northern India were dominated by broad agrarian coalitions built around land reforms, irrigation, procurement, cooperative institutions and regional leadership. By the second decade of the twenty-first century, however, electoral competition increasingly revolved around the construction of stable social coalitions composed of multiple caste and community groups.

This transformation cannot be attributed to any single political party. Rather, it reflected broader changes in Indian society: economic liberalisation, expanding media, urbanisation, educational mobility, declining profitability of agriculture and the growing centrality of identity in democratic competition. Political parties adapted differently to these changes, but all were compelled to operate within a social landscape where inherited identities continued to shape political behaviour.

Haryana provides a particularly revealing case. For much of the post-independence period, state politics was widely perceived through the prism of Jat political dominance. This perception was itself more complex than popular narratives often suggest, as power circulated among multiple elite groups and parties over time. Nevertheless, the image of Jat predominance acquired political significance because perceptions often matter as much as empirical distributions of power in electoral politics.

Beginning in the 1990s, and more decisively after 2014, political competition increasingly centred on building coalitions among communities that did not necessarily share common economic interests but perceived themselves as sharing concerns regarding political representation. Sections of Scheduled Castes, Other Backward Classes and urban middle classes became increasingly significant components of new electoral alignments.

Scholars have proposed several explanations for this shift. Some emphasise leadership, organisational discipline and welfare delivery. Others point to ideological mobilisation centred on religious nationalism. Still others argue that political entrepreneurs successfully engaged with existing social cleavages, including perceptions of dominance by particular caste groups. These explanations are not mutually exclusive; together they help explain the durability of new political coalitions.

The organisational strength of the BJP and the ideological network associated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh deserve careful consideration in this context. Unlike many regional parties whose organisational presence often intensifies during elections, the broader Sangh network has historically invested in long-term social work through educational, cultural and voluntary organisations. This continuous presence enables sustained engagement with communities beyond immediate electoral campaigns. Political scientists have argued that such organisational depth provides significant advantages in shaping political narratives and maintaining voter contact.

At the same time, critics contend that identity-based mobilisation—whether centred on religion, caste or nationalism—can divert public attention from structural economic issues such as agrarian distress, unemployment and rural inequality. Supporters respond that questions of national identity, security and cultural belonging are themselves legitimate political concerns and cannot be reduced solely to economic interests. The continuing electoral success of such politics suggests that large sections of the electorate find these narratives meaningful alongside welfare policies and governance considerations.

For the purposes of this essay, the essential point is analytical rather than partisan. Electoral success increasingly depends upon the capacity to integrate multiple identities into coherent political coalitions. Parties capable of doing so enjoy structural advantages over organisations attempting to mobilise solely around occupational or economic interests.

This helps explain why movements organised around farmers' demands often struggle to sustain electoral momentum. Their primary constituency is defined by occupation, whereas electoral politics increasingly organises citizens through layered identities combining caste, religion, locality, welfare beneficiaries and national belonging. Occupational identity becomes only one element within a much broader political self-understanding.

Consequently, democratic movements confronting governments on economic issues frequently discover that they are simultaneously competing against deeply embedded social identities that extend far beyond the immediate question under dispute.

"Where democratic organisations ask people to think as cultivators, electoral politics often invites them to think simultaneously as members of caste, community, religion and nation."

The Democratic Deficit: Why Farmers', Workers' and Labour Organisations Struggle

The weakness of democratic organisations in northern India cannot be explained by lack of commitment, ideological clarity or organisational sacrifice. On the contrary, many peasant organisations, agricultural labour unions and workers' associations possess long histories of struggle against colonial rule, landlordism, exploitative labour practices and unequal economic policies.

The difficulty lies elsewhere.

Democratic organisations attempt to construct solidarity horizontally.

Traditional rural authority reproduces solidarity vertically.

This distinction is fundamental.

A farmers' union asks cultivators from different castes to recognise their common economic interests.

A labour organisation asks agricultural workers to identify with one another despite differences of religion or caste.

A democratic movement attempts to expand the political imagination beyond inherited identities.

By contrast, kinship networks, caste associations and customary institutions begin with identities already accepted as legitimate by participants.

The first must persuade.

The second inherits.

This difference dramatically affects organisational sustainability.

Every village child learns caste long before joining a political organisation.

Marriage reinforces it.

Festivals reinforce it.

Kinship reinforces it.

Neighbourhood reinforces it.

Economic organisations, however, require conscious political education.

They require meetings.

Pamphlets.

Discussions.

Campaigns.

Leadership development.

Institutional discipline.

The asymmetry is obvious.

Identity reproduces itself socially.

Democratic organisation must reproduce itself politically.

This explains why issue-based movements often appear spectacular during crises but difficult to sustain afterwards.

The social institutions reproducing inherited identities continue functioning every day, whereas movement organisations frequently become active only during periods of mobilisation.

Consequently, democratic politics repeatedly begins from a structurally weaker position.

This structural disadvantage becomes particularly visible whenever social conflicts emerge. A village divided by memories of caste violence cannot easily organise collectively around agricultural prices. Communities carrying unresolved experiences of humiliation, exclusion or displacement seldom trust appeals to abstract economic unity unless those historical grievances are themselves acknowledged.

Therefore, organisations seeking durable democratic mobilisation must address not only material inequality but also social inequality. Economic programmes alone cannot dissolve historical mistrust.

This perhaps constitutes the greatest unfinished task of democratic politics in northern India.

The Basic Contradiction: Why Democratic Mobilisation Repeatedly Fragments

Every historical argument advanced in this essay converges upon one central contradiction.

The northern Indian countryside contains two simultaneously existing realities.

The first is economic.

Agriculture binds together cultivators, tenant farmers, artisans, agricultural labourers, transport workers and rural service providers within a shared economic system. They experience common problems: declining profitability, rising input costs, shrinking landholdings, indebtedness, unemployment, climate uncertainty and dependence upon public policy.

The second reality is social.

The same countryside remains organised through historically evolved hierarchies of caste, kinship, honour and community.

These realities do not simply coexist.

They interact continuously.

During periods of economic crisis, the first becomes politically visible.

During periods of identity mobilisation, the second reasserts itself.

The tragedy of northern India's democratic politics is that the first rarely succeeds in permanently transforming the second.

Consequently, economic cooperation remains episodic.

Identity remains enduring.

This contradiction explains why villages capable of extraordinary unity during farmers' movements may later become divided during elections.

It explains why communities sharing identical economic interests may nevertheless support different political projects.

It explains why democratic organisations repeatedly confront difficulties converting successful movements into durable political transformation.

The contradiction is therefore not accidental.

It is structural.

"The village produces wheat every season. It also reproduces hierarchy every generation."

Conclusion: Beyond Identity: Reimagining Democratic Politics in Rural India

The history of northern India's countryside is not merely the history of agriculture.

It is the history of power.

The field produces crops.

The village produces identities.

Politics determines which of these becomes decisive.

The argument developed throughout this essay has not been that caste alone explains rural politics, nor that economic interests are irrelevant. Rather, it has sought to demonstrate that democratic mobilisation repeatedly encounters historically embedded structures of social authority that organise political behaviour through inherited identities. Unless these structures are critically understood, issue-based movements will continue to experience remarkable moments of mobilisation followed by equally remarkable fragmentation.

The future of democratic politics therefore depends not simply upon better economic programmes but upon creating institutions capable of cultivating social trust across caste and community boundaries. Such trust cannot be built by ignoring historical inequalities; nor can it emerge through moral appeals alone. It requires sustained organisational work, constitutional commitment, equitable local governance, educational transformation and the deliberate expansion of democratic spaces where citizens encounter one another primarily as equals.

The farmers' movement demonstrated that such solidarity is possible.

Its greatest achievement was not merely the repeal of legislation.

It was the temporary creation of a democratic public in which diverse communities acted together despite long-standing differences.

The challenge before future democratic movements is to transform that temporary public into a permanent political culture.

History suggests that this task will be difficult.

It also suggests that no democracy can mature without attempting it.

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