Social capital as a product of class mobilization and state intervention: Industrial workers in Kerala, India
研究印度喀拉拉邦的国家干预与阶级动员如何产生两种社会资本,并探讨有组织工厂部门与无组织非正规部门中的阶级妥协与再分配增长协调机制。
This paper argues that state intervention and class mobilization in the state of Kerala, India, have produced two forms of social capital. Kerala's high level of social development and successful; redistributive reforms are a direct result of mutually reinforcing interactions between a programmatic labor movement and a democratic state. This synergy between state and labor has also created the institutional forms and political processes required for negotiating the class compromises through which redistribution and growth can be reconciled. These dynamics are explored through a close examination of both the organized factory sector and the unorganized (informal) sector.