Identity and Discrimination in South Asian Politics
Thu, September 5, 4:00 to 5:30pm, Loews Philadelphia Hotel, AnthonySession Submission Type: Full Paper Panel
Session Description
This panel brings together a diverse set of perspectives to examine the role of identity and identity-based discrimination in South Asian politics, particularly in relation to marginalized groups. It features research on the relationship between state and non-state elite with language, caste, and national identity in India, addressing questions relating to how elites influence citizens’ language choices, when citizens are likely to find justifications for discriminatory religious nationalist laws persuasive, and how threats to elite status influence relations between high status elites and marginalized groups. It further includes discussions of how these dynamics spill over into and play out in South Asian diaspora communities, shaping political mobilization efforts in new contexts.
Sub Unit
Individual Presentations
Speaking to the State: Audit Experiments on Language in Southern India - Deepika Padmanabhan, Yale University
Ethnicity across Borders: Mobilization against Dalit Discrimination in the US - Anum Syed, George Washington University
Citizen Support for Religious Nationalist Rhetoric - Rajeshwari Majumdar, Yale University
The Elite Origins of Shared Identity: Evidence from Colonial India - Sebastian Lucek, Stanford University
The Color of Politics: Skin Tone and Attitudes towards Caste-Based Voting - Susan L Ostermann, University of Notre Dame; Amit Ahuja, University of California, Santa Barbara
