This book focuses on the militarisation of a secessionist movement involving kashmiri militants and indian military forces in jammu and kashmir in contrast to conventional approaches that distinguish between inter and intra-state military conflict this analysis of indias external and domestic crises of militarisation is located within a single analytic it argues that both dimensions have common political origins highlighting the intersection between the two the author maintains that the heaviest and most grievous price of using the military for domestic repression and for the defence of kashmir is paid by kashmirs citizens and society drawing on womens subjective experience of militarisation she examines the relationship between state military processes at the national level and social transformations at the local/societal level by way of conclusion she maintains that kashmirs humanitarian tragedy - exemplified by its gender dimensions - underlines why militarisation has failed to either ensure security for the state or security and justice for kashmiris a decentralised democratic state with a plural concept of nation and identity she believes is the best safeguard against using the military for domestic repression within and extraordinary military and nuclear consolidation without
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