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2 - Forms of Suspicion: Mobility As Threat, Census As Battleground

from Part II - The Axis of Suspicion: Classifications of Identity and Mobility in Crises

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2022

Yael Berda
Affiliation:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Summary

Beginning with the transition from Mughal and Ottoman rule, this chapter focuses on the forms and schedules of the census as a site of negotiation and as a battleground infused by the axis of suspicion between administrators and communal leaderships, comparing bureaucratic negotiations and processes of separation in each of the colonies. It compares how hybrid bureaucracy deployed the census as a toolkit of government, in which categories of religion, language, and region gradually solidified into ethnonational identities. Through attempts to standardize, homogenize, and separate, communities were constituted as essentially different to justify the selective pairing of administrative practice to population. Division into majorities and minorities turned the census forms into a site for negotiation between subjects and officials, as well as an arena for rivalry between communities. Suspicion or embrace of enumeration techniques depended on one’s proximity to the negotiation over resources, amidst fears of control.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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