FUNDED BY: BRITISH ACADEMY GLOBAL CHALLENGE FUND 2021-2023
Abstract
This project aims to understand and analyse how ‘the state’ in South Asia addresses labour rights and health provision of workers during and in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. It provides a cross-country and cross-regional comparison between India (Delhi, Kerala) and Sri Lanka (Colombo, Jaffna). It seeks to map variations in state responses to workers’ employment issues and health concerns and relates these to differences in state structure (unitary-federal), regime type (militarisation, autocratic democracy), the strength and mobilisation capacity of workers and the nature of party-political competition. The project will engage with academic research partners in India and Sri Lanka, who will take a lead role in collecting and analysing documents and visuals, conducting qualitative research, co-authoring and contributing to dissemination. The project will generate articles, policy briefs, virtual workshops and serve as a pilot for an expanded research project involving more studies from South Asia.
Project Outcomes
Swenden, Wilfried, Papia Sengupta, Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, Aardra Surendran and Kanchana Ruwanpura (2022). State Capacity, Ideology and the Management of COVID-19 in South Asia: India and Sri Lanka in Perspective. (2022). Journal of South Asian Development.
Papia Sengupta, Aardra Surendran and Wilfried Swenden (2021) COVID-19 and Labour Protection in India. https://www.sps.ed.ac.uk/sites/default/files/assets/BA-GCRF-COVID19%20Research%20Brief%20India.pdf