It is the story of India's urban transformation, examining how the post-liberalisation urban project has been shaped through subaltern histories, logics and subjects. The subaltern frontiers play a role in transferring commonly-owned agricultural land into legible property, and shaping cheap, exploitable migrant labour that the city depends on.
"In urban and peri-urban areas across the Global South, politicians, planners and developers are engaged in a voracious scramble to refashion land for global real estate investment, and transfer state power to private sector actors. Much of this development has taken place on the outskirts of the traditional metropoles, in the territorially flexible urban frontier. At the forefront of these processes in India is Gurgaon, a privately developed metropolis on the southwestern hinterlands of New Delhi, which has long been touted as India's flagship neoliberal city. Subaltern Frontiers tells the story of India's remarkable urban transformation by examining the politics of land and labour that have shaped the city of Gurgaon. The book examines how the country's flagship post-liberalisation urban project has been shaped and filtered through agrarian and subaltern histories, logics and subjects. In doing so, the book explores how the production of globalised property and labour in contemporary urban India is filtered through colonial instruments of land governance, living histories of uneven agrarian development, material geographies of labour migration and the worldly aspirations of peasant-agriculturalists"--