Affiliation:
1. University of Western Australia
Abstract
Sikkim in north-eastern India is a small border state strategically located
between China, Nepal, and Bhutan. Two decades of state-led investment
in infrastructural development and private investment in hydropower and
pharmaceutical industries has transformed Sikkim from a remote border
state to a de facto Special Economic Zone (SEZ) where incursions by private
capital are masked under state-led development policies. The chapter
focuses on Setipool slum, east Sikkim, located near two pharmaceutical
factories, to demonstrate how ambiguous land rights and the establishment
of pharmaceutical factories have led to spatially contained land
booms which replicate nexuses of illegality, claim-making, and exclusions
that are characteristic of corporate land grabs. The paper illustrates (i) the
liminal origins of development zones, (ii) the networks and, sometimes,
unforeseen socio-spatial impacts within and outside development zones,
and (iii) the different forms of intimate exclusions that challenge prior
assumptions around local responses to corporate incursions.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press