This paper examines waiting, caste and politics through reference to the cultural and political practices of educated unemployed young men in India. We show through ethnographic fieldwork in Uttar Pradesh how a shared sense of young male limbo sometimes erodes caste divides. While waiting in poorly provisioned north Indian universities, young men develop novel cultures that bridge caste, class and religion. They also collaborate across class, caste and religious boundaries in protests against the state and university bureaucracies. At the same time, some students have responded to a sense of 'waiting' by developing collusive relationships with local government and university bureaucrats. Waiting emerges not as a passive condition but as a seed-bed for new cultural and political forms. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
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CITATION STYLE
Jeffrey, C., & Young, S. (2012). Waiting for change: youth, caste and politics in India. Economy and Society, 41(4), 638–661. https://doi.org/10.1080/03085147.2011.635435