//php if(!empty($last_str)){if(!preg_match('~[0-9]+~', $first_str)){echo $title;}else{echo $last_str; }}else{echo $title;}?>205: Youth, Social Change and Politics in India Today: An Introduction to the Delhi Studies
John Harriss, Visiting Research Professor, ISAS and Mr Rahul Advani, Research Assistant, ISAS
11 April 2015
Events in many parts of the world over the last decade - starting with protests in Greece in
December 2008, following the death of a young student at the hands of the police, and
continuing through the Arab Spring, the movement of Los Indignados in Spain, the Occupy Wall
Street Movement, then widespread demonstrations in Brazil and Turkey in 2013, and other
protest events - have thrown into sharp relief the significance of young people in contemporary
politics. In India, similarly, young people were generally recognised as having played a vital role
in the India Against Corruption movement (IAC), associated with Anna Hazare in 2011-12, then
in the wave of protests over the Delhi rape case of December 2012, and in the meteoric rise of
the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in 2013. Observers have noted some commonalities amongst these
events: the central, though not exclusive role played by young people; the extensive use in them
of social media; that they have mostly been characterised by spontaneity and the absence of
hierarchical leadership (though this is not true in the case of IAC).