The Myth of Empowerment: Gender, Conflict, and ‘Development’ in Kashmir

Source: Minorities and Populism – Critical Perspectives from South Asia and Europe , 2020

Author(s): Samreen Mushtaq

Countries: Kashmir

Topics: Conflict Causes, Gender, Governance

This paper attempts to look at the discourse of development and empowerment in a conflict zone like Kashmir to explore how such narratives are employed by the state to suppress people’s resistance. Kashmir has been noted as one of the longest running ‘disputes’ between India and Pakistan following the Partition of the subcontinent in 1947—a narrative that ignores the centrality of Kashmir and Kashmiris to the conundrum. This paper brings forth India’s nation-building exercise in Kashmir, often hinged on the discourse of development, to show how gender and conflict intersect with violence being central to state control.