He had collaborated with various projects including, ‘Democracy and Social Capital in Segmented Societies’ with SIDA and
Uppsala University, Sweden during 1996–99, ‘Political Ethnography of West Bengal Villages’, ‘Understanding Political Changes in Rural West Bengal’ with
Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata and
Boston University, USA during 2005 and 2012–13, ‘Embedding Poor People’s Voices in Local Governance’, with
University of Sheffield, United Kingdom and
Centre for Development Studies, Kerala during 2008–09.[2] From 2016 onwards, he is the member of the International Centre for Advanced Studies ‘Metamorphoses of the Political’ (ICAS:MP), a consortium of seven Indian and German partners, funded by the
German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).[2]
He theorised West Bengal's unique history of affiliation to political parties and polarisation along party lines. He coined the term “party society” in this context[6][7][8][9] He argues that politics in west Bengal spins not on caste, religious or ethnic associations, but on their absorption within this or that political party.[6]
Awards and honours
Nehru Trust for Cambridge University Fellowship[2][10]
1) Government as Practice: Democratic Left in a Transforming India (New Delhi: Cambridge University Press) 2016.[5]
2) Interrogating Social Capital: The Indian Experience (edited with
Niraja Gopal Jayal, Sudha Pai and Bishnu N. Mohapatra), (New Delhi, Sage), 2004.[11]
Book chapters
'Left in the Lurch: The Demise of the World's Longest Elected Regime? (with an Epilogue)', in Sudha Pai (ed.) Handbook of Politics in Indian States: Region, Parties and Economic Reforms, (New Delhi: Oxford University Press), 2013.[12]
‘Party-society, its Consolidation and Crisis: Understanding Political Change in West Bengal’, in Anjan Ghosh, Tapati Guha-Thakurta and Janaki Nair (ed.), Theorizing the Present: Essays for Partha Chatterjee (New Delhi: Oxford University Press), 2011, 226- 250.[13]
‘West Bengal: Permanent Incumbency and Political Stability’ in Sandeep Shastri, K C Suri and Yogendra Yadav (ed.), Electoral Politics in Indian States: Lok Sabha Elections in 2004 and Beyond (New Delhi: Oxford University Press), 2009, 326–45.[14]
‘Politics of middleness: the changing character of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Rural West Bengal (1977-1990)’ in Sugata Bose, Barbara Harriss, Ben Rogaly (eds), Sonar Bangla?Agricultural Growth and Agrarian Change in West Bengal and Bangladesh (New Delhi: Sage),1999.
‘How to Govern the Poor? The Role of Social Policies in Economic Transformation’, in Nandini Gooptu and Jonathan Parry (ed.s), Persistence of Poverty in India, Social Science Press, New Delhi, 2014, 370–431.[15]
Social Policy in India: Education Reform and Employment Guarantee in a Rapidly Changing Economy’, in Samir Kumar Das (ed.) ICSSR Research Surveys and Explorations: Political Science: Volume – 1 (New Delhi: Oxford University Press), 2012, 111–144.
Strengthening Rural Decentralisation, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta (with Partha Chatterjee, Pranab Kumar Das, Dhrubajyoti Ghosh, Manabi Majumdar and Surajit Mukhopadhyay) 2006.
‘Writers’ Buildings and the reality of decentralized rural power: some paradoxes in West Bengal’ in Niraja Gopal Jayal, Amit Prakash & Pradeep Sharma, ed., Local Governance in India: Decentralisation and Beyond (New Delhi: Oxford University Press), 2006.[16]
‘Agrarian reforms and panchayati raj in West Bengal’ in Ashish Ghosh and Neera Chandhoke (eds.), Grassroots movement and social change (DCRC, Delhi University Press), 1995, 117–123.