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Theory, Culture & Society
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Capitalizing Disease

Biopolitics of Drug Trials in India

Amit Prasad

Department of Sociology at the University of Missouri-Columbia, prasada{at}missouri.edu

Recent success of Indian engineers, businessmen, as well as other technically qualified professionals has created an obsession with knowledge and creativity. Documents like India as a Knowledge Superpower have proliferated and we continually hear the mantra of investing in and harnessing of human capital. There are, however, several strands of human capital in India and not all of them harness knowledge and creativity. People on whom drugs are being tested represent one such human capital, which, even though it is being energetically mobilized to provide India with a strategic advantage in the world market, also highlights the contradictions within India’s shifting imaginary, economy and politics. Drug trials in India, in the context of neoliberal globalization, not only challenge and complicate, but also operate within a constellation of divisions — labor/capital, west/non-west, colonial/sovereign, national/global and so on. In this article I analyze how the people on whom drug testing is being done in India are being ‘harnessed’ as human capital, which leads to politicization of ‘bare life’ through ‘inclusive-exclusion’.

Key Words: biopolitics • drug trials • governmentality • human capital • India • neoliberalism

Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 26, No. 5, 1-29 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0263276409106347


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