Skip to content
← All Deep Dives
Deep Dive · Caste & Inequality

Caste, Identity, and Development

Why development outcomes track social hierarchy — and what it would take to design programs that don't.

India Inequality 11 readings
IM
ImpactMojo Editorial
Curated by the ImpactMojo team
A house-curated working syllabus on caste and development, written for the practitioners and researchers we train. We're explicitly seeking an invited Dalit, Bahujan, or Adivasi curator to refine and extend it; this is a starting point, not a final reading list.
House Pick
Editor's Note

Caste is the variable Indian development practitioners are taught to ask about and then taught to drop because the data is messy or the conversation is uncomfortable. The result is a body of evaluation evidence that systematically undercounts the most important determinant of who benefits from public programmes, who carries the social costs of policy, and who is rendered invisible to the state.

This list begins with the foundational texts that any serious reader needs to engage with — Ambedkar above all — and then moves through the contemporary economic and ethnographic work that has tried to take caste seriously as an analytical category, not just a control variable. The final section is for practitioners: people designing or running programmes who want to know what the literature actually implies for everyday choices about targeting, recruitment, and accountability.

Read only one thing here? Read Annihilation of Caste. Want one contemporary book? Choose between Yengde and Deshpande depending on whether you want urgency or rigour — and know that both are necessary.

Section 01

The Theoretical Architecture

The texts that define the conceptual ground — what caste is, how it works, and why it has survived the abolition of its formal sanctions.

The text. Ambedkar's undelivered speech is the most powerful and unsparing analysis of caste ever written, and it remains the necessary starting point for anyone working on Indian inequality. The Navayana annotated edition includes Roy's long introductory essay, "The Doctor and the Saint," which sets the speech against Gandhi's response and is itself a major contemporary intervention.

A contemporary Dalit intellectual's account of caste in everyday Indian life — academic, political, social, and intimate. Yengde's chapter on "Dalit capitalism" and his critique of liberal multiculturalism are particularly useful for development practitioners who want to understand why reservation policies have not, by themselves, dismantled the underlying structure.

Section 02

Empirical Evidence

What the data shows about caste and economic outcomes — and what the data, by design, cannot see.

Section 03

Voice and Representation

Writing by Dalit, Bahujan, and Adivasi authors that practitioners trained in mainstream economics and policy are most likely to have missed.

A Dalit Christian woman's autobiographical novel, and one of the most important texts in modern Tamil literature. Karukku describes from inside what caste discrimination feels like in school, at work, and in religious life — the kind of texture that most evaluation literature cannot reach.

A long-running platform for Dalit and anti-caste writing on contemporary politics. Worth subscribing to for the breadth of perspectives and for the regular reminder that most mainstream Indian commentary on caste is written by people who do not experience it.

Section 04

Practice

What the literature implies for how programmes are actually designed, staffed, and evaluated.

The clearest single-author treatment of why reservation policies were designed the way they were, what they have achieved, and the empirical case against the standard "merit" critique. Useful both for designing inclusive programmes and for arguing against bad-faith critiques of inclusive design.

Although classified above as political-economy ethnography, Red Tape is also one of the most important books on how caste operates inside the bureaucratic machinery of welfare delivery. The closing argument — that structural violence is enacted through ordinary procedural practice — is essential for understanding why "implementation" failures are not random.

Suggested citation

ImpactMojo Editorial (2026). "Caste, Identity, and Development." ImpactMojo Deep Dives. Retrieved from https://impactmojo.in/DeepDives/caste-identity-development.html

Want to curate a Deep Dive?

If you teach, research, or practice in development and have a reading list worth sharing — pitch us.

Pitch a Deep Dive →