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Beyond colonial urbanism: State power, global connections and fragmented land regimes in twentieth-century Hyderabad city

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Abstract

Urban histories of modern South Asia have centred on British Indian cities and the reign of colonial urbanism, with dependence on metropolitan imperatives and models regarded as givens. Focusing on Hyderabad, one of the subcontinent's five largest cities and capital of an autonomous princely state throughout the colonial era, this article establishes the analytical utility of princely urbanism as a framework for writing the history of South Asian cities. Characterized by state-directed planning, transnational urbanist networks and multiple overlapping property regimes, this mode of city development and its resonance points to hidden genealogies of modern urbanism.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)11-31
Number of pages21
JournalUrban History
Volume51
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 9 2024

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