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Gender, Family, and the Policing of the ‘Criminal Tribes’ in Nineteenth-Century North India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 February 2020

JESSICA HINCHY*
Affiliation:
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Email: jhinchy@ntu.edu.sg
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Abstract

In the South Asian setting, the fields of gender history and family history are still predominantly concerned with relatively elite social groups. Few studies have examined issues of gender and the family in the history of Dalit, low-caste, and socially marginalized communities, especially those that were labelled ‘criminal tribes’ from the mid-nineteenth century on. This article explores the ways in which gender patterned criminalized communities’ experiences of everyday colonial governance under Part I of the 1871 Criminal Tribes Act (CTA) in the first two decades that it was enforced in northern India. In this early period, the colonial government did not closely regulate marriage practices, domestic arrangements, or the gendered organization of labour within communities categorized as ‘criminal tribes’. Nevertheless, notions of sexuality and gender underlay colonial knowledge of the ‘criminal tribes’, which emerged in dialogue with middle-class Indian gender and caste politics. Moreover, the family unit was the central target of the CTA surveillance and policing regime, which aimed to produce ‘industrious’ families. Officially endorsed forms of labour had complex implications for criminalized communities in the context of North Indian gender norms and strategies of social mobility. Gender power dynamics also shaped criminalized peoples’ interpersonal, embodied interactions with British and Indian colonial officials on an everyday basis. Meanwhile, different forms of leverage and evasion were open to men and women to cope with their criminalization and so the colonial state was experienced in highly gendered ways.

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Research Article
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2020

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Introduction

In British India, the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries saw numerous colonial projects to prohibit gendered cultural practices that ‘oppressed’ Indian women and girls—including sati (widow-burning), female infanticide, and child marriage—often in alliance with elite Indian reformers.Footnote 1 Yet gender structured the colonial governance of Indian society in broader and more mundane ways than these extensively studied and ideologically charged projects of woman ‘rescue’ might suggest. Indian women and men's everyday interactions with the laws, institutions, and agents of the colonial state were structured by gender power relations, plural Indian and British gender norms, and varied expectations around domesticity and intimacy.

This article explores the gender patterns of local colonial governance through a study of Part I of the 1871 Criminal Tribes Act (CTA), which targeted diverse, socially marginalized communities whom the British categorized as ‘criminal tribes’ or hereditary criminals by caste occupation.Footnote 2 The marginality of these criminalized groups varied: for instance, some groups were marginal to sedentary societies, while others had extremely low caste status. In the North-Western Provinces (NWP, now Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand) in the 1870s and 1880s, the primary aim of Part I of the CTA was to restrict the movements of the so-called criminal tribes and, through sedentarization, to compel them to adopt cultivation or other ‘industrious’ work.Footnote 3 People from communities that were proclaimed as criminal tribes had their names and details recorded on police registers, were subjected to a daily head count, and could not leave their villages without permission.Footnote 4

Between 1871 and 1890, the NWP government did not closely regulate criminalized communities’ marriage practices, domestic arrangements, or gendered organization of labour, though later decades would see such projects. Nevertheless, in this early period, notions of sexuality and gender underlay colonial knowledge of the ‘criminal tribes’, which emerged in dialogue with middle-class Indian gender and caste politics. Moreover, the family unit was the central target of the CTA surveillance and policing regime, which aimed to produce ‘industrious’ families. Officially endorsed forms of labour had complex implications for criminalized communities, in the context of North Indian gender norms and strategies of social mobility. Gender power dynamics also shaped criminalized peoples’ interpersonal, embodied interactions with British and Indian colonial officials on an everyday basis.Footnote 5 Meanwhile, different forms of leverage and evasion were open to men and women to cope with their criminalization and so the colonial state was experienced in highly gendered ways.

In the South Asian setting, the fields of gender history and family history are still predominantly concerned with relatively elite social groups, particularly the emerging middle class of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Footnote 6 To be sure, there have been several important studies of female sex workers, courtesans, and performers, including women of relatively low social status, such as Devadasis.Footnote 7 However, we know very little about the broader ways in which gender structured the interactions of low-status communities—such as Dalit (Untouchable), Shudra (fourth varna), and nomadic people—with dominant social groups and the state. Few historians have scrutinized changes in gender and family structures in these marginalized communities. Charu Gupta's recent book The gender of caste, which explores representations of Dalits in Hindi print culture, is an important step in this direction.Footnote 8 Gupta's study begs the question: how did the gendered experiences of Dalits in general compare with the experiences of those particular low-status communities that were given the denigrating epithet of ‘criminal tribe’?

Yet historians of the ‘criminal tribes’ have not foregrounded gender in their studies. Since the 1980s, a significant body of historical research has examined Part I of the CTA, largely through a legal history lens, and has argued that the CTA primarily targeted peripatetic peoples whom the British associated with criminality.Footnote 9 More recent histories have broadened the focus and explanation.Footnote 10 For instance, Anastasia Piliavsky has argued that ‘robber-police’ (who policed a ruler's domains, while raiding rival rulers’ territories) were frequently labelled criminal tribes.Footnote 11 Yet gender continues to be a peripheral concern of this literature. To be sure, Rachel Tolen has analysed the bodily aspects of the CTA, and Meena Radhakrishna's and Anand Pandian's studies of the CTA in southern India include some passages of interesting gender analysis.Footnote 12 However, gender is not a major focus of these authors, and the role of gender in structuring routine, local colonial governance remains a considerable gap in the historiography of the CTA. By comparison, historians of Indian jails and overseas penal colonies like Clare Anderson, Satadru Sen, and Aparna Vaidik have been more attentive to gender.Footnote 13 Although the spatial and disciplinary character of ‘criminal tribe’ villages was quite different from penal colonies in this period—since registered people in the NWP were ‘settled’ in their own villages through a ‘pass system’ that restricted their mobility, rather than being forcibly relocated for coerced labour—there were several similarities, as well as divergences, between the CTA project and convict transportation, which add to our understanding of the gender structures of colonial penal systems.

This article defines gender as a pattern of social relations based on perceived differences between gender/sex categories and historically contingent gender norms (for example, models of masculinity and femininity). Additionally, I examine how gender discourses can ‘signify … relationships of power’, in particular, class and caste hierarchies and identities.Footnote 14 The visibility of gender in the historical records is uneven, despite the colonial archive's verbosity on the ‘criminal tribes’. This article analyses Urdu and Hindi newspapers and published English-language ethnologies, but also draws extensively on colonial state records.Footnote 15 Colonial ethnography and policy discussions were often overtly gendered and sexualized. Yet the role of gender in patterning criminalized peoples’ everyday interactions with the police only emerges in passing comments in official correspondence. There is also a resounding silence in the colonial archives on police violence, including the sexual harassment and abuse of people registered under the CTA.

Criminalized communities

The dominant ‘criminal tribe’ stereotype that was cemented in the late 1860s was premised on hereditary criminality, understood not in terms of biology, but rather through the colonial understanding of caste as a rigid and unchanging hierarchy. From ‘time immemorial’, certain castes had apparently had criminal hereditary occupations and were thus ‘destined by the usage of caste to commit crime’.Footnote 16 The British also frequently equated the ‘criminal tribes’ with ‘wandering tribes’, thereby criminalizing peripatetic peoples.Footnote 17 The criminal tribe concept was shaped by British metropolitan anxieties about gypsies and Victorian ideas of habitual criminality,Footnote 18 as well as the long Indian literary tradition that depicted ‘robber castes’—low-caste groups that acquired criminal skills through hereditarily transmitted knowledge.Footnote 19

Experiments with policing the ‘criminal tribes’ predated the CTA in the NWP and also neighbouring Punjab.Footnote 20 In 1863, the NWP relocated around 1,200 Bawariyas to a ‘colony’ at Bidauli in Muzaffarnagar district. They were given tenancies by the local landlord, Mehndi Hassan Khan, but by 1870 only 704 remained at Bidauli.Footnote 21 After 1871, to proclaim a ‘tribe, gang or class of persons’ as a ‘criminal tribe’ under the CTA, the NWP needed to prove to the Government of India that the group was ‘addicted to the systematic commission of non-bailable offences’, largely through ethnographic and anecdotal evidence. However, the NWP also had to specify how the group would ‘earn its living’ following notification.Footnote 22 Since the NWP was unwilling to set up new ‘reformatory settlements’ or provide work and land, it was difficult to demonstrate that nomadic or landless people would be able to take up ‘honest’ livelihoods if notified.Footnote 23 As such, in the 1870s the central government only approved the notification of four groups in the NWP: the Bawariyas of Muzaffarnagar district, the Aheriyas and Haburas of Etah district, and the ‘Sunorias’ (Sanorhiyas) of Lalitpur district. Bawariya, Aheriya, Habura, and Sanorhiya became official categories with nebulous boundaries and somewhat ambiguous meaning. As Bajrange, Gandee, and Gould have highlighted, ‘[c]ommunity descriptors, although not colonial “inventions,” often obscured fluid, nuanced and inconvenient realities which rendered them clumsy bureaucratic devices’.Footnote 24

The Sanorhiyas were described as a criminal ‘fraternity’ that comprised people of various jatis (birth groups or castes) of high, middling, and low status, who were employed by the small princely state of Tehri or Orchha in Bundelkhand.Footnote 25 Thus, unlike most groups designated as ‘criminal tribes’, the Sanorhiyas were not a jati and they were not necessarily low status. Moreover, NWP officials did not consider Sanorhiyas criminals by caste occupation, in contrast to the ‘criminal tribe’ stereotype.Footnote 26 Colonial officials usually used the term ‘Sanorhiya’ (a Brahman community) to describe these gangs, but they occasionally termed them ‘Oootageyrah’ (uthaigira, a thief, pickpocket, or rascal).Footnote 27 The gangs were possibly known as uthaigiras, but NWP administrators’ insistent questioning of informants on the question of caste produced the answer of ‘Sanorhiya’, a high-status identity.Footnote 28 Though they lived in British territory, the gangs were part of Orchha's security apparatus. Within a ruler's domain, there were ‘chains of patronage’ running from rulers, to nobility, to landholders and, as Piliavsky has shown, each segment of this chain employed ‘raider-protector’ groups, which ‘protected those who patronized them and plundered those who did not’.Footnote 29 Raids allowed patrons to raise funds, to intimidate rivals, and to restore perceived rights. In the case of Sanorhiyas, they apparently shoplifted and robbed at some distance from Orchha, thus undermining rival political powers. The gangs reportedly gifted valuable booty to the Orchha court and paid a tax, thus providing access to high-value stolen items and additional revenue.Footnote 30 Meanwhile, the gang leaders or sarganas had policing functions within the Orchha domain. Membership of the gangs fluctuated, as men used an occasional thieving expedition to supplement their incomes.Footnote 31 Thus, many sometime-gang members and people who had not been on plundering expeditions were likely to have been caught up in the CTA.

Nineteenth-century colonial sources describe Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas as ‘Untouchable’ and today, several Indian states classify them as ‘Scheduled Castes’ (SCs).Footnote 32 However, unpacking these groups’ historical identities, occupations, and social practices is a complex task. Criminalizing language pervades the accounts of British administrators, Indian police, and ‘respectable’ informants. These commentators frequently equated certain sources of livelihood—for instance, hunting and forest gathering—and certain ways of life—especially, seasonal migration—with criminality. Moreover, both elite Indian and British commentators described Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas in terms of ‘occupational stereotypes’ that emphasized ritually polluting caste occupations but obscured more diverse forms of labour.Footnote 33 Nevertheless, colonial records hint at the varied work and mobility patterns of these communities.

The NWP government portrayed both the Bawariyas and Aheriyas as largely sedentary hunter-gatherers who used land and natural resources in unproductive ways. Colonial officials reported that Bawariyas hunted various animals (such as antelope, birds, lizards, and hares) for subsistence, for sale, and in the employment of European sportsmen.Footnote 34 Bawariyas also gathered forest produce and reportedly practised ‘peculiar’ forms of agriculture, such as the scattering of timber ashes along with grains at sowing time.Footnote 35 Yet some colonial officials described Bawariyas as ‘fairly respectable cultivators’.Footnote 36 Bawariya men were also employed as chaukidars (watchmen), while Bawariya women often sold gathered medicinal roots and plants, and made patchwork quilts.Footnote 37 Many Bawariyas probably combined cultivation (of various sorts) with agricultural labour, shikar (hunting), gathering, and other work, depending on their economic needs. Such a mix of economic activities was fairly typical in rural areas.Footnote 38 Similarly, colonial officials commonly depicted Aheriyas as a ‘hunting tribe’—indeed, Aheriya comes from aheri, meaning a hunter or fowler.Footnote 39 Aheriyas also gathered forest produce and sold leaf platters, baskets, and other consumer goods made from gathered materials.Footnote 40 Many were tenant cultivators, including the residents of nine of the 12 Aheriya villages that were registered under the CTA in Etah.Footnote 41 Hence, Aheriyas had varied forms of livelihood in addition to, or apart from, shikar.

Given the well-documented British valorization of hunting,Footnote 42 it might appear surprising that the NWP government classified several groups that were associated with hunting as ‘criminal tribes’. However, colonial commentators made a sharp distinction between hunting for leisure, which was manly and sporting, and hunting for subsistence, which they blamed for the destruction of game stocksFootnote 43 and disparaged as ‘dirty’ and ‘primitive’.Footnote 44 British commentators also criticized the dietary habits of subsistence hunting groups as ‘unclean’ and ‘filthy’, imbibing upper-caste Hindu attitudes.Footnote 45 In addition, ‘hunting tribes’ were criminalized because of the importance of agrarianization to colonial economic and environmental policies.Footnote 46 The colonial state sought to encourage taxable and high-yield forms of cultivation and discourage supposedly ‘lazy’ and ‘unproductive’ farming, like shifting cultivation.Footnote 47 It also attempted to incorporate ‘forest dwellers into a political ecology based on taxation and intensive resource exploitation’.Footnote 48 Groups that were associated with hunting, gathering, and marginal forms of cultivation challenged the colonial agrarian order.

Meanwhile, colonial officials defined the Haburas of the central Ganges-Yamuna Doab as a ‘vagrant thieving tribe’.Footnote 49 The colonial association of nomadic groups with criminality was most explicit in relation to the Haburas in this region and period. Uncontrolled mobility prompted fears of porous political boundaries, illicit commerce, and unknowable populations. Peripatetic people also challenged the colonial state's efforts to make subjects legible, governable, and taxable.Footnote 50 Colonial officials reported that vagrant Haburas gained ‘small sums of money’ by ‘fortune-telling’ for ‘the village people’.Footnote 51 They also hunted lizards, foxes, jackals, and other animals.Footnote 52 Moreover, many Haburas—including several of the people registered in Etah—were tenant cultivators, while the registered Haburas were primarily sedentary.Footnote 53 Nevertheless, the association of Haburas with ‘vagrancy’ stuck.

According to NWP officials, Bawariya, Aheriya, and Habura men all pilfered crops and livestock, while the Bawariyas and Aheriyas also practised highway robbery and, additionally, the Haburas carried out burglary. Reportedly, all three groups committed crime in distant places and were engaged in relationships of patronage and indebtedness with local landlords, in which the patron's protection was exchanged for a cut of the booty.Footnote 54 These patronage ties may have taken the form of ‘plunder-policing’. Indeed, Bawariyas were often employed as chaukidars and such watchmen were frequently ‘robber-police’.Footnote 55 Yet some British officials doubted that Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas were more likely to commit crime than other social groups.Footnote 56 Moreover, prior to 1871 these communities were frequently the targets of police harassment and were always among the first suspects when crimes were reported.Footnote 57

Regardless of the extent to which they actually committed crime, the diverse groups that were registered in this early period—the Sanorhiyas, Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas—reveal that multiple concerns intersected in the CTA, including: the challenge to colonial authority posed by raider-protector groups, contests over land and forest use, and fears of uncontrolled mobility. While Piliavsky has recently argued that the criminal tribe project was not about controlling peripatetic groups, as most historians have suggested, but rather about ‘uprooting … the indigenous policing system’, the mix of groups proclaimed in the NWP instead highlights that several preoccupations overlapped in the CTA.Footnote 58

This confluence of various concerns is especially apparent when we consider the second part of the law. Historians of the ‘criminal tribes’ have failed to explain why the Hijra community was policed under Part II of the 1871 CTA, usually relegating Part II to footnotes, if they mention it at all.Footnote 59 Hijras are a discipleship-based community that has traditionally performed and asked for donations (badhai), especially at births and marriages. Nineteenth-century sources describe Hijras as feminine-identified castrates or ‘Hijras from birth’. The colonial government labelled Hijras ‘eunuchs’ and accused them of being ‘professional sodomites’, ‘obscene’ performers, castrators, and kidnappers. The aims of Part I and Part II of the CTA were distinct and could be summed up as assimilation versus elimination. Part I aimed to compel ‘productive’ livelihoods by policing mobility and thus achieve the assimilation of the ‘criminal tribes’ into the lower rungs of rural society. In contrast, Part II aimed, in the short term, to erase Hijras from public space through the prohibition of performance and feminine dress, and, in the long term, to gradually render them ‘extinct’ by interfering with Hijra discipleship and preventing castration (which the British incorrectly considered a prerequisite for Hijra-hood).Footnote 60 The colonial government usually viewed Hijras and the ‘criminal tribes’ as discrete criminal collectives. Nevertheless, both groups were understood through criminalizing discourses that were overlain with issues of gender, sexuality, intimacy, and domesticity. For British officials, deviant femininity and masculinity were aspects of the many-sided ‘criminal tribe problem’, along with anxieties about mobility, raider-protectors, and resource use.

Female sexual ‘immorality’ and the criminal tribe stereotype

Colonial commentators paid close attention to the minutiae of ‘criminal tribe’ conjugal and sexual practices, including marriage and divorce customs, domestic arrangements, and female sexual ‘immorality’.Footnote 61 This discourse linking criminality and deviant intimate lives was evident from the 1860s in government correspondence—in particular, district administrators’ ethnographic reports on local ‘criminal’ communities—and from the 1870s, in the published ethnographies of administrator-scholars, especially the regional glossaries of castes and tribes. However, because the NWP did not seek to regulate ‘criminal tribe’ marriage and sexual practices in the 1870s and 1880s, discussion of sexuality was less apparent in correspondence on the routine administration of the CTA than in ethnographic accounts. Published ethnographies tended to give a more abstract and homogenous view of indigenous communities, but these tomes were shaped by the relatively ‘satisficing’ ethnography of district officials. Ethnographic information emerged out of interactions with Indian colonial officials and Indian informants, especially ‘respectable natives’, including urban raises (patrons like banking and business magnates), rural landlords, and educated men from the emerging middle class.Footnote 62 The lengthy gendered and sexual commentary on the ‘criminal tribes’ reflected colonial ethnographers’ broader assumption that marriage and kinship practices were central to understanding caste. Colonial ethnographers and linguists also detailed ‘obscene’ and ‘immoral’ social practices in the hope of eventually stamping them out.Footnote 63 Yet the colonial ethnography of the ‘criminal tribes’ also highlights the importance of gender and sexuality in historical processes of criminalization.

British officials repeatedly criticized ‘criminal tribe’ marriages as low-caste practices that did not involve rituals performed by Brahmans. A. O. Hume wrote of the Haburas: ‘Marriage seems scarcely to be with them a religious ceremony; it consists in placing four small coins in a figure of diamond shape outside which a circle is drawn, and round this the bride and bridegroom walk seven times.’Footnote 64 Colonial commentators also claimed that the marriage customs of criminalized groups indicated their criminality. In the Aheriya community, which contextually practised dowry or bride price, prospective brides were apparently ‘stolen’ or ‘seduced’.Footnote 65 This resonated with the wider colonial narrative that ‘wandering’ communities kidnapped children and trafficked slaves.Footnote 66 In particular, British officials portrayed bride price as slavery. G. G. Parker, a police official, reported that Haburas’ ‘form of marriage is a sale, in which the man buys his wife from her father, for the invariable price of Rs. 25’.Footnote 67

Not only were ‘criminal tribe’ conjugal practices criminal, but female sexual deviance was the counterpart to male criminality according to British administrators. In 1864, E. Tyrwhitt, a police official, claimed that lambardars (village headmen) often carried on ‘intrigue[s] with the [Bawariya] women’, intrigue being a common British euphemism for adultery.Footnote 68 In 1872, G. Palmer, Muzaffarnagar's magistrate, claimed that ‘by force of circumstances, generation [of Bawariyas] succeeded generation in which the men were professional thieves, and the women openly immoral’.Footnote 69 Examples of this discourse abound in William Crooke's 1896 Tribes and castes volume, which synthesized much of the NWP correspondence on the criminal tribes from the previous three decades. For instance, ‘in Muzaffarnagar it is extremely rare for a Bâwariya woman to live with her husband. Almost invariably she lives with another man …’.Footnote 70 Similarly, although Haburas strictly punished ‘inter-tribal immorality’, Crooke alleged that ‘the girls have considerable liberty before marriage, and a faux pas is not very seriously dealt with’.Footnote 71

Colonial officials contrasted different ‘criminal’ caste communities, as well as different ‘branches’ of castes, on the basis of women's perceived degree of sexual morality.Footnote 72 Crooke distinguished the relatively respectable ‘Eastern branch’ of Bawariyas who kept ‘their women … under careful control’, from the ‘disreputable’ ‘Western branch’ who lived in the Ganges-Yamuna Doab and among whom ‘the standard of morality is very low’.Footnote 73 Moreover, colonial accounts frequently interlinked peripatetic lifestyles and sexual deviance. Crooke wrote of the ‘vagrant’ Haburas, ‘[t]heir women from their vagrant, mendicant life naturally bear an indifferent character’, whereas ‘settled’ Haburas enforced rules against ‘immorality’.Footnote 74 Similarly, police official R. T. Hobart labelled women of the Sansi community—a largely nomadic group that was proclaimed as a criminal tribe in the early 1890s—as ‘prostitutes’.Footnote 75 It is difficult to determine the actual conjugal and sexual norms of these communities, given this highly sexualized ethnography.

Sexuality and conjugality were typically an explicit part of the NWP's case for notifying a group as a criminal tribe. In outlining the ‘customs’ of communities, administrators noted marriage and sexual practices—along with diet, religion, and (licit and illicit) occupations—to ‘prove’ two factors necessary for notification: first, that a community was a ‘distinct tribe’ and, second, that its members were ‘criminal as a whole’.Footnote 76 If a group's ‘peculiarities in customs’ and distinctiveness from other low-status communities were in doubt, sexual and marriage practices became especially crucial. For instance, in an 1877 report, Parker emphasized that in establishing the distinctiveness of ‘Baherias’ (Beriyas or Bedias), ‘[t]he chief thing noticeable is their marriage custom’. He also repeatedly highlighted ‘the number of Baheria women in the keeping of zamindars’.Footnote 77 In this period, the Government of India accepted the criminality of most communities that the NWP proposed to notify, but, as we saw above, the central government's perception of a group's access to work or land cinched the case for notification.Footnote 78 Nonetheless, sexual and marriage customs helped to prove that a community was ‘distinct’ and ‘criminal’.

In British India, gender and sexuality were often central to the discourses and practices through which socially marginalized peoples were criminalized. For instance, in the 1860s colonial administrators claimed that female prostitutes purchased kidnapped girls to be brothel workers and, moreover, that their criminality was evidenced by the ‘fact’ of their sexual embodiment: Indian prostitutes were invariably ‘infertile’, therefore all children in brothels must be kidnapped.Footnote 79 The colonial stereotype of the Hijra kidnapper brought together ‘wandering’ criminality (even though Hijras were largely sedentary), deviant domesticity (the Hijra household was supposedly a brothel), sexual contagion (Hijras were ‘addicted’ to sex with men), and child sexual abuse (they were apparently the pimps of kidnapped Indian boys).Footnote 80 In other settings, historians have also noted that processes of social and legal criminalization frequently involve gender and sexual discourses, though in contingent, context-specific ways.Footnote 81

Female sexuality was also wrapped up with late nineteenth-century middle-class Indian representations of crime. Newspaper reports often linked perceived spikes in crime to an increase in women's sexual immorality. This painted a picture of moral chaos and corruption, usually in distant or rival cities,Footnote 82 in a sexualized form of ‘inter-regional one-upmanship’.Footnote 83 For instance, Lucknow's Oudh Akbar reported in 1872 that ‘the behavior of the women of Umritsur [Amritsar] continues to be indecent as ever’, while ‘[c]omplaints of theft and swindling are also said to be frequent in the city’.Footnote 84

However, sexualized descriptions of ‘criminal tribe’ women did not appear in the North Indian press in the 1860s and 1870s. Though Indian commentators called for government action against several groups that the British labelled ‘criminal tribes’, such as the Bawariyas and Haburas, they did not dwell on the women of these communities.Footnote 85 Nevertheless, the colonial narrative of the sexually wayward criminal tribeswoman drew upon middle-class Indian—and especially high-caste Hindu—representations of Dalit and Shudra women as hypersexual. (Recall that most ‘criminal tribes’ were socially marginalized and many were reportedly ‘Untouchable’, including Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas.) In the late 1800s, educated men from high-caste and ashraf (high-status) scribal communities increasingly identified as ‘middle class’ in order to distinguish themselves from the ‘old elite’, especially Indian rulers.Footnote 86 Charu Gupta argues that didactic literature aimed at upper-caste, middle-class Hindu women constructed the ideal woman through representations of low-caste women as ‘other’. Softly spoken, even-tempered upper-caste women were contrasted with loud, foul-mouthed, and obscene low-caste women. Shudra and Dalit women were also represented as sexually available kutnis (vamps or pimps) who corrupted dominant-caste women. Dalit women were particularly prone to sexualization because they usually worked outside the home in mixed-gender situations, whereas femininity and public labour were increasingly seen as incompatible.Footnote 87 It is notable that the British did not represent mixed-caste Sanorhiya gangs as failing to regulate women's sexuality. Colonial officials only described low-caste ‘criminal tribeswomen’ as sexually immoral, highlighting the imprints on colonial knowledge of high-caste, middle-class Hindu attitudes.

These discourses had a longer history—ancient Sanskrit texts portrayed low-caste women as polluted, evil, and lustful—but they took on a new salience in the late 1800s.Footnote 88 Everyday caste-based practices surrounding conjugality and the management of women's sexuality became central to middle-class Hindu identity and were transformed and hardened in the process.Footnote 89 The gendered construction of caste and class identity was propelled by middle-class men's anxieties about threats to their social status due to competition for employment, limited business successes, perceived threats to landowning, and nascent low-caste movements.Footnote 90 Tanika Sarkar has argued that in the context of colonial rule, middle-class men made claims to social and political power in the only available domain—their own homes—placing enormous significance on conjugality and women's behaviour. Dominant-caste Hindu men sometimes ‘renovate[d]’ tradition ‘to accommodate spaces for dangerously dissident lower orders’.Footnote 91 But support for state intervention into ‘criminal’, ‘immoral’, or low-status homes allowed middle-class men to assert that their own homes were morally impeccable.Footnote 92 Portraying low-caste communities’ marriage and sexual practices as contemptible reinforced social hierarchies and constructions of class and caste identity. These wider political currents shaped the information ‘respectable’ informants provided to the British on the immoral sexuality of the ‘criminal tribes’.

For instance, colonial administrator-scholars’ critiques of ‘criminal tribe’ marriage customs resonated with middle-class, dominant-caste Hindu redefinitions of respectable conjugality. In the late 1800s, older ideas about ideal marriage forms narrowed and rigidified. Marriage ‘without price’ gained new significance as a marker of status, while bride price was condemned as ‘dishonourable’.Footnote 93 Middle-class Indian commentators termed bride price a ‘kind of illegal union’, which was merely the ‘slave-trade in a disguised shape’.Footnote 94 This indigenous politics surrounding marriage influenced colonial officials’ denunciation of bride-price and other ‘criminal tribe’ conjugal practices. The late nineteenth-century trope of the sexually immoral criminal tribeswoman was thus a product of convergence between colonial moralizing discourses and upper-caste, middle-class Hindu gender and caste politics.

The ‘problem’ of criminal tribe masculinity

For both middle-class Indians and British administrators, the criminal tribe ‘problem’ was also a problem of masculinity. In the late 1860s and 1870s, communities that the British considered ‘criminal tribes’ (such as Bawariyas and Haburas) were represented by the Urdu and Hindi press as badmash (people ‘of bad livelihood’) and, to a lesser extent, as robbers, dakaits (bandits), ‘tribes of professional criminals’, and ‘criminal tribes’.Footnote 95Badmash was a ‘generic term’ for rascals and criminals, whether low-status or ‘debauched’ respectable people, which evoked the ‘dangerousness’ of illegitimately held power ‘that threaten[ed] person, property, and respectability’.Footnote 96 The badmash was also a figure of aberrant masculinity. The North Indian press frequently represented badmashes, as well as dakaits and robbers, as indulging in drinking, gambling, and dancing.Footnote 97 As Radhika Singha has pointed out, the badmash ‘is vested with a threatening masculinity, one distanced from “proper” work and associated with inappropriate forms of consumption’.Footnote 98Badmashes were also portrayed as sexually immoral: the badmash of Benares apparently ‘corrupt[ed] the morals of the women’.Footnote 99 Moreover, North Indian commentators denounced rapists as badmash and, conversely, claimed that robbers and badmash committed sexual violence against women in the course of their crimes.Footnote 100 To give just one example of many,Footnote 101 a report in the Lauh-i-Mahfuz of Moradabad denounced the Dom community—which the NWP government increasingly termed a criminal tribe—as ‘notorious robbers and budmashes’ and claimed that a Dom man had recently ‘ravished’ an Ahir woman (of comparatively higher-caste status) and then murdered her.Footnote 102 Thus, in the newspapers of this period, groups that the British labelled criminal tribes were often described as badmash, a figure that evoked improper work, unruly masculinity, immorality, and sexual violence against women.

This association with sexual violence does not appear prominently in colonial narratives of ‘criminal tribe’ masculinity. Nevertheless, British representations of criminal tribesmen resonated more generally with elite North Indians’ concerns about badmashes’ inappropriate livelihoods and disorderly masculinity. This was due to the centrality of industriousness and self-discipline to both Victorian British and middle-class Indian notions of masculinity.Footnote 103 For the British, the threat of criminal tribe masculinity was twofold. On the one hand, ‘criminal tribesmen’ were apparently lazy, idle, and lacked the ‘will to work’.Footnote 104 J. R. Reid, the NWP secretary, lamented that ‘so long as they [the Sanorhiyas] are perfectly happy in idleness and the tranquil enjoyment of their kinsmen's plunder, they will not willingly undertake a life of agricultural labour’.Footnote 105 On the other hand, British officials claimed that ‘criminal tribesmen’ inevitably longed for the adventure and freedom of their criminal expeditions. According to Etah's magistrate, J. Smith, ‘the old love of roving, the old longing for a predatory life, would certainly break out and overcome every effort to induce habits of industry and steady perseverance’.Footnote 106 In short, sexually immoral femininity and unproductive and turbulent masculinity were reoccurring themes in British formulations of the criminal tribe ‘problem’, which dovetailed with aspects of middle-class Indian representations of low-caste and ‘badmashi’ sections of society.

Producing productive families

Notions of the family were at the centre of the NWP's plan to reform the criminal tribes. The CTA applied to entire families, including children, and aimed to transform these ‘criminal’ families into productive households of tenant farmers. Of course, in the NWP everyone registered under the CTA had ‘fixed’ residences and a substantial number were tenant cultivators, but their agricultural work was apparently a cloak for theft.Footnote 107 The CTA provided for two possible methods: first, ‘a system of prevention, under which the members of the tribe are prevented, by registration and roll-call, from leaving their homes on predatory excursions’ and, second, ‘a system of repression by which they are removed from their homes to a compulsory place of residence, and forced to support themselves there by such employment as the Government provides’.Footnote 108 The NWP chose the considerably cheaper ‘preventive’ option. While the Bawariyas would remain in the Bidauli colony established in 1863, this did not formally operate as a ‘reformatory settlement’, meaning that forced labour was not implemented. Nor would the NWP relocate the other registered groups to new reformatory settlements. However, stopping the ‘wanderings’ of registered people, would ‘force … [them] to confine themselves to the legitimate profession of agriculture’.Footnote 109 Interestingly, this emphasis on reform-through-labour was more typical of British India's penal colonies, such as the Straits Settlements and the Andaman Islands, than the organization of jails in India.Footnote 110 The Government of India pointed out that the NWP's ‘preventive’ approach to the ‘criminal tribes’ assumed that registered people already had tenancies on sufficient land or, alternatively, some other means of livelihood within the boundaries of their village.Footnote 111 Although the NWP claimed that there was easy access to land and a demand for labour in the districts in question, this assumption turned out to be incorrect.Footnote 112

The NWP's rules on the enforcement of the CTA provided that the district magistrate should compile a register of members of the proclaimed ‘tribes’, which recorded physical appearance, age, place of residence, previous convictions, and other personal details. A registered person could not ‘leave the boundaries of the town or village in which he is a resident’ without a pass from the magistrate or district superintendent of police. This pass was ordinarily issued for up to 14 days for a specific route of travel and had to be presented on certain dates at particular police stations. The magistrate or superintendent was also required to hold a ‘roll call’ of registered people at irregular intervals.Footnote 113 In Etah, roll call was only held once a month during the 1870s, though it was conducted more often elsewhere.Footnote 114 However, the requirement that every registered person had to ‘report himself or herself every evening to the village headman or police officer … appointed … by the Magistrate’ was a much greater intervention into everyday life than an intermittent roll call.Footnote 115

Although the British primarily associated criminality with ‘criminal tribesmen’, whole families were usually policed under the CTA. Women and children's personal details were recorded on the police registers, their movements were subject to the pass system, and they had to present themselves at the daily head count and periodic roll calls. In addition, section 18(8) of the CTA provided for the ‘inspection of the residences’ of registered people. Although ostensibly a measure to prevent the concealment of booty, section 18(8) also facilitated the ongoing surveillance of domestic spaces.Footnote 116 Meanwhile, the police registers organized individuals according to family, noting the ‘Name of the head of family’ and ‘Names of members of family with their relation to the head thereof’.Footnote 117 The NWP also annually compiled statistics on the number of births in registered communities.Footnote 118

The ‘criminal tribe’ family was regulated and surveilled in these ways partly because the British claimed that ‘criminal’ caste occupations were passed down generationally within families.Footnote 119 But beyond this, the NWP government also aimed to create industrious and settled families. It effectively argued that sedentarization would encourage farming and thereby ‘dispose things’ in such a way as to create families of productive cultivators who were moral members of society.Footnote 120 In 1876, the NWP lieutenant-governor ‘trust[ed] that … it may be found possible to direct the energies of the proclaimed families to honest enterprize [sic]’.Footnote 121 Two years later, police official P. C. Dalmahoy argued that ‘[a]ll of the proclaimed families’ should be settled, ‘employment sufficient for their support should be found for them, and they must be made to work’.Footnote 122 For the NWP government, the ‘success’ of one Habura village in Etah district called Nagla Ram Lal was due not only to its industriousness—‘the residents having taken kindly to agriculture’—but also to the fact that this ‘little colony of ten families’ was based on the institution of the family.Footnote 123

The agenda of creating productive ‘criminal tribe’ families conformed to colonial agrarianization policies that were propelled by the economic imperative of extending the revenue base.Footnote 124 However, such agrarianization programmes were also underpinned by the colonial valorization of the Indian peasant family. Colonial officials viewed the patriarchal family as a bedrock of morally respectable Indian village life and thus assumed that any agrarian scheme targeting the ‘criminal tribes’ would have to be family-based.Footnote 125 Similarly, in the 1880s in the newly irrigated Punjab Canal Colonies, colonial officials never contemplated recruiting a migrant workforce of single men—despite their demands for ‘sturdy’ male peasants—and instead recruited entire families to create a modern, orderly version of ‘traditional’ village life.Footnote 126 Sen has also noted that efforts to create a self-sustaining penal colony in the Andaman Islands through the agricultural settlement of convict couples assumed that ‘a healthy society, one that was based on stable families, created individuals … [that] were orderly, productive, and politically desirable’.Footnote 127 Thus, the family was at the centre of various colonial agrarian schemes in British India.

By the late 1870s, however, NWP officials had concluded that the Sanorhiyas were not a community comprising families, necessitating a differently gendered system of policing for them. J. Liston, the deputy commissioner of Lalitpur, argued that the Sanorhiyas ‘cannot properly be called a “tribe,” being of no particular caste or family’, demonstrating that a ‘criminal tribe’ was partly defined as a family-based entity.Footnote 128 NWP officials reported that Sanorhiya boys were trained to commit crime within gangs, rather than within families.Footnote 129 As Quinton, the commissioner of Jhansi, put it, ‘Sanoriahs as such are not born but made. The son of a Sanoriah does not necessarily follow the father's calling.’Footnote 130 Given this, Liston concluded in 1879: ‘There is no such thing as a Sanoriah family, properly speaking.’Footnote 131 A consensus also emerged that ‘it is the males alone who sally out to plunder and the women stop at home’.Footnote 132 Female immobility and confinement to the home or village signalled law-abiding behaviour to British officials. The ‘settled’ character of Sanorhiya women meant that their mobility did not need to be restricted. In 1879, the NWP government ruled that only adult men and ‘boys who were found to have been initiated into this thieving fraternity should be registered’, while other children and all women were deregistered.Footnote 133 Clearly, the CTA regime was family-based—and thus, according to officials, irrelevant to the Sanorhiyas. The CTA usually targeted the ‘criminal’ family, but in Lalitpur the law narrowly targeted male criminality.

Nevertheless, the NWP government continued to monitor Sanorhiya families through gathering statistics of the annual number of births and the extent of lands tenanted per family.Footnote 134 Moreover, the idea of turning male Sanorhiyas’ families into industrious and settled domestic units retained its appeal. In the mid-1880s, the NWP government considered whether the relocation of the ‘criminal tribes’ to reformatory settlements would improve the system of policing. Yet since the Sanorhiya ‘fraternity’ was not made up of families, the creation of settlements for them appeared an uncertain prospect. Webster, the NWP inspector general of police, opined:

… there is considerably more hope of success in an attempt to reclaim the Aheriahs and Haburahs by colonizing them than there would be in the case of the Sanauriahs. The former are criminal tribes in the real meaning of the term, and not merely criminal associations as are the Sanauriahs. And this fact makes their colonisation feasible, as they could be settled in families, while the Sanauriahs could not.Footnote 135

Notwithstanding these doubts, in 1884 the NWP attempted a small ‘experiment’ in which tenancies on two tracts of government-owned, uncultivated land were given to 16 Sanorhiya families who were ‘without visible means of subsistence’ and had volunteered for resettlement.Footnote 136 Official accounts are filled with images of smiling, hard-working families who were busy building their homes, clearing the land, and planting crops such as kodom (a small millet) and bhindi (okra).Footnote 137 The officiating commissioner of Jhansi reported in 1885 that, ‘During the rains they hutted themselves in sheds made of branches, straw, and leaves, and on our visit they all mustered in good health and spirits.’Footnote 138 Later that year, the deputy commissioner reported that on a recent visit, he had found the families ‘contented and happy: they were busy building their houses’.Footnote 139 Both officials suggested that it was through physical labour—particularly the taming of the wilderness and the building of family homes—that the Sanorhiyas had been transformed into happy families.Footnote 140 This ‘experiment’ shows that the family was pivotal to the CTA project, but it also suggests that this was not only due to ideologies of hereditary criminality: visions of settled, hard-working peasant families had a much broader appeal among colonial administrators.

Although NWP officials were preoccupied with the labour and livelihood of the ‘criminal tribe’ family, they did not attempt to micro-manage familial relations, such as parent-child relationships, during this self-consciously ‘experimental’, early phase of the CTA. The NWP government paid limited attention to the ‘reform’ of children, notwithstanding their registration under the law. Officials had established a Bawariya school in the 1860s, but after 1871 did not attempt new educational schemes.Footnote 141 Moreover, district administrators rarely detailed the extent to which children worked.Footnote 142 In contrast, colonial officials devoted a great deal of attention to the work of adult men and women. What, then, were the gendered repercussions of the governance of the family under the CTA?

Women's work and norms of femininity

Within the NWP's vision of industrious ‘criminal tribe’ families, adult women were expected to work, both on household and agricultural tasks. Colonial officials did not valorize women's labour, but they nevertheless regarded the toil of women as necessary for the transformation of the ‘criminal tribes’. In 1879, the commissioner of Meerut, W. C. Plowden, complained that Bawariya women incited men to go on thieving expeditions and would continue to do so, ‘so long as the women do not work’.Footnote 143 Families in which women did not have a known means of livelihood were assumed to be criminal, especially if adult men had absconded. A register of Bawariyas noted of one absconded man, Gurdina, that ‘none of the family cultivate, and the vernacular report is silent as to how the woman earns a living’. Work on the family farm was the form of female labour that was most acceptable to the colonial state, whereas paid agricultural labour, forest gathering, and the production of consumer goods from gathered materials were suspect.Footnote 144

Colonial officials’ insistence that ‘criminal tribeswomen’ undertake work did not conform to Victorian notions of domesticity. Middle-class Britons saw the home as a feminine domain—separated from the morally corrupting, male world of work and politics—and viewed women's proper role as that of wife and mother, confined to the domestic sphere. Of course, this was a middle-class ideal that did not describe the conditions of most working-class, and even some middle-class, British women's lives.Footnote 145 In this light, it is perhaps unsurprising that British administrators did not prescribe a model of domesticated femininity for criminalized Indian women. However, the NWP's disinterest in managing a gendered division of labour in ‘criminal tribe’ families differed from the policies implemented in British penal settlements for Indian convicts. In the Straits Settlements and Burma in the mid-1800s, convict labour was organized through a public/private spatial division. Women's work was generally ‘indoor labour’, within the prison and outside of public view, even when women did physically strenuous work like lime and cement production.Footnote 146 The authorities primarily viewed female convicts as potential marriage partners and gave women permission to live outside the prison if they married a male convict.Footnote 147 In the Andamans in the late 1800s, certain industries, such as weaving, were designated as women's work.Footnote 148 Yet in the context of the early CTA project, the NWP was not concerned with confining female labour to spaces or tasks that were domestic and feminine, according to colonial notions. For instance, in the official view, the fact that Bawariya women were in charge of cultivation in most registered families with tenancies was not a problem because of inappropriate female labour, but rather because it suggested widespread male absconding.Footnote 149

The NWP government failed to impose a gender division of labour due to colonial knowledge of gender and caste, in particular, assumptions about the types of work and public behaviours that were suitable for low-caste women, who were apparently beyond the bounds of feminine respectability. The 1879 removal of Sanorhiya women (of varied caste status) from the register, and thereby from concerted work demands, reinforces this interpretation. British officials viewed agricultural labour as entirely appropriate for low-caste, criminalized women, even though this undercut colonial notions of domesticated femininity, demonstrating the complex ways that gender discourses shaped colonial governance.

These colonial assumptions were shaped by the meanings of women's labour in rural India. To be sure, female involvement in agriculture—particularly in transplantation, weeding, and animal husbandry—was reasonably common in late nineteenth-century India. Women of humble means frequently worked in their family's fields or as agricultural labourers. However, relatively well-off social groups demonstrated their status by ‘subsum[ing]’ women's agricultural work ‘within the daily routine of domesticity’, outside of public view. Rural Indians increasingly saw female agricultural work outside of household compounds as immoral and not respectable.Footnote 150 Thus, one effect of the colonial encouragement of female labour in ‘criminal tribe’ communities was to circumscribe the ability of these groups to adopt strategies of social mobility that hinged on the domestication of women's work.

Making hard-working peasant men

The ‘lazy’ and ‘turbulent’ masculinity of ‘criminal tribesmen’ continued to preoccupy officials in their efforts to produce industrious families, since masculinity was a constitutive part of how colonial officials envisaged the process of agrarianization.Footnote 151 The regulation of mobility would create conditions in which a particular type of man—a hard-working peasant—could emerge.Footnote 152 To be sure, prior to the CTA, some NWP officials had doubted whether ‘criminal tribesmen’ could ever be ‘reformed’.Footnote 153 Moreover, British officials occasionally suggested other methods of reform, aside from agricultural labour, such as the enlistment of registered men in the army.Footnote 154 In 1876, Sladen, the magistrate of Muzaffarnagar, commented on the Bawariyas: ‘They would fight well I should say.’Footnote 155 Indeed, during the First World War, the army would enlist some men who were registered under the CTA.Footnote 156 However, between 1871 and 1890 the NWP administration saw cultivation as the primary route to men's rehabilitation.

The aim of making ‘criminal tribesmen’ into industrious agriculturalists resonated with broader colonial representations of the sturdy, hard-working Indian male peasant that were constructed in opposition to the lazy, wild, and lawless nomadic pastoralist.Footnote 157 Colonial administrators stressed that to become ‘steady’ peasants, ‘unsteady’ registered men needed to habituate themselves to the repetitive, hard physical work of the cultivator and to support their families though their own labour.Footnote 158 The NWP particularly underlined the importance of registered men cultivating their own family plots as tenant farmers, rather than labouring on the land of other men.Footnote 159 For instance, officials viewed the exploitation of the Bidauli Bawariyas by their landlord, Mehndi Hassan Khan, not merely as a factor that drove Bawariyas to abscond, but also as a threat to the masculinity of Bawariya men. Khan had repeatedly granted Bawariyas tenancies on uncultivated land and once they had cleared the land, replaced them with non-Bawariya tenants, shifting the Bawariyas to new plots of ‘wasteland’, which they were again forced to clear. Several NWP officials wrote that Bawariya men's independence was threatened by their insecurity of tenure, since they were unable to enjoy the ‘fruits’ of their own labour. Hobart, the deputy inspector-general of police opined, ‘The future prosperity of the colony is truly threatened if men will not be allowed to enter into the fruits of their labours.’Footnote 160 Similarly, the commissioner of Meerut, F. M. Lind, lamented that, ‘These men have broken up new lands and rendered them fit for cultivation, and they have done this under the confident expectation of reaping the fruits of their labour only to find that their hopes have been crushed, and their labour expended for the benefit of another man.’Footnote 161

The attempts of NWP officials to nurture independence and self-sufficiency in ‘criminal tribesmen’ drew upon the middle-class Victorian notion of ‘manly character’, the characteristics of which were independence and a strong work ethic, along with decisiveness, courage, straightforwardness, and social responsibility.Footnote 162 Honesty was also central to manly character and colonial concepts of ‘honest forms of livelihood’ were thus implicitly associated with masculinity. However, the idea of manly independence was premised on individualism, which Victorian Britons saw as a modern condition. As such, NWP officials’ hopes of promoting self-sufficiency and autonomy in ‘criminal tribesmen’ were somewhat at odds with commonplace colonial representations of Indian villages. European commentators generally agreed that there was ‘an absence of a free market, of individuals … and of a competitive spirit’ (the characteristics of the ‘modern’) in the ‘ancient community’ of the Indian village.Footnote 163 Perhaps the emphasis on manly independence in discussions of the CTA was a consequence of the official view that in the case of the ‘criminal tribes’, the collective was precisely the problem.

Criminalized men sometimes argued for their deregistration so that they could achieve masculine mastery through ‘settling’ the land. Take, for instance, the complaints of the Sanorhiyas of Lalitpur in 1885: ‘The people now have a disliking to being registered and clamoured … for release. The reason they gave was that they are never their own masters; some one is forever looking them up for roll-call, or to be seen by the Inspector … and that they in consequence could settle nothing.’Footnote 164 Criminalized men thus understood that for the colonial government, manliness was bound up with the physical exertion of clearing and cultivating the land and providing for one's family. Was this a strategic deployment of colonial discourse or an articulation of indigenous notions of manliness?

In Tamil-speaking southern India, Pandian has argued that from the medieval period, an ethic of ‘agrarian civility’ was evident, which celebrated the ploughman as ‘agrarian citizen’ and upheld the moral value of working the plough. Some groups that were labelled criminal tribes in the early twentieth century, like Kallars, were seen as the agrarian citizen's antithesis.Footnote 165 However, in northern India, cultivation had a complicated and ambiguous relationship to masculinity. Attachment to the land was linked to rural notions of manliness, honour, and power,Footnote 166 but the labour of cultivation could damage a man's status, due to the stigma that was connected to ploughing.Footnote 167 For high-status groups like Rajputs, physical involvement in cultivation did not always lower their social rank, at least in regions where they were especially powerful. However, as low-caste people increasingly gained tenancies around the mid-nineteenth century, rural elites further emphasized the status fault line of manual work.Footnote 168 Moreover, Lalitpur, where the (mixed-caste) Sanorhiyas were registered, was one of several regions where high-caste groups did not perform manual labour,Footnote 169 suggesting that the Sanorhiyas’ attachment to farming was a strategic discourse meant for colonial ears. Since North Indian rural elites did not idealize the figure of the male cultivator, Shudra groups that staked claims to higher-caste Kshatriya identities often relinquished the plough.Footnote 170

Nevertheless, in the second half of the nineteenth century, Dalit communities persistently defended their rights as tenants, illustrating the economic and social importance of cultivation to them, with their often-limited and precarious tenancy rights. Agricultural labour was also vital to the religious practices of Chamar and other Dalit cultivators, including rituals like the worship of the plough.Footnote 171 By the early twentieth century, both Dalit and Shudra activists would assert the ‘dignity’ of the ploughman, although many Shudras claimed an Aryan origin narrative, while Dalits increasingly distanced themselves from the Hindu community.Footnote 172 Whether low-caste discourses celebrating agricultural work shaped late nineteenth-century colonial policies is questionable, given the colonial bias towards elite informants. Nevertheless, while high-status communities did not associate the manual labour of cultivation with manliness and honour, many low-caste communities appear to have validated the figure of the ploughman. Low-status criminalized men may have articulated similar discourses, yet the capacity of ‘criminal tribesmen’ to gain a living solely from cultivation as a tenant farmer was extremely limited under the CTA.

Failures of policing and failures of masculinity

According to the NWP government, the project to transform ‘criminal tribe’ families into agriculturalists produced, at best, mixed results. By the late 1870s, there was an official consensus that the Bidauli colony had failed due to Mehndi Hassan Khan's mistreatment of the Bawariyas, their insecure tenancies, and male absconding. As such, the Bawariyas in Muzaffarnagar district were deregistered in mid-1879.Footnote 173 The Aheriyas and Haburas remained on the registers until 1892–3, while the Sanorhiyas continued to be subjected to the CTA into the early twentieth century.Footnote 174 Yet the NWP doubted that these communities would ever become hard-working agriculturalists.Footnote 175 The Sanorhiya colonies set up in 1884 were deemed a failure within six years. Visions of agricultural rehabilitation lingered, but the NWP increasingly proposed that newly notified ‘criminal tribes’ be ‘provided’ with ‘menial’ labour, as watchmen, sweepers, brick-makers, construction ‘coolies’, and factory workers.Footnote 176

British officials often viewed the disappointing results of the CTA as a consequence of the failed masculinity of criminalized men. In 1878, Tyrwhitt, the inspector-general of police, wrote, the ‘criminal tribes are not content to live on the hard fare of the village ryot's coarse bread and dal, [since] they have been accustomed to get the very best of food without stint … [rather than] by the sweat of their brow’. So-called criminal tribesmen would never ‘value’ any means of livelihood ‘if it does not include the luxuries of good food for themselves and jewelry for their women’.Footnote 177 In 1879, Robertson, the NWP secretary, was ‘at a loss to conceive how it could have ever been supposed’ that restrictions on Bawariyas’ mobility ‘would be enough to induce them to desert the lucrative and easy profession of thieving, to which they were born and bred, for the hard and precarious life of an agriculturalist’.Footnote 178 Later that year, Robertson complained that the ‘reclamation’ of Sanorhiya men who ‘have no taste for the hard and uncertain nature of agricultural toil’ and ‘are accustomed to get the best food with a minimum of trouble … is in fact well nigh helpless’.Footnote 179 This discourse of inherent criminality is predictable, given that this was ‘colonial common sense’.Footnote 180 However, the importance of the part played by bodily dispositions and food habits to the ostensible failure of ‘criminal tribe’ masculinity is striking. According to colonial officials, these men did not have the will to endure the physically strenuous work of cultivation, nor did they have the character to undergo the sensory and bodily deprivation of coarse peasant food.Footnote 181

Colonial officials also pointed to another failure of masculinity: ‘criminal tribesmen’ were content to let other men provide for their families. Plowden, Meerut's commissioner, claimed that the Bawariya ‘who would be inclined to work if he could eat the fruit of his labour, finds himself burdened with a number of hungry mouths which should be filled by the exertions of others who either sit at home doing nothing or confine their exertions to theft’.Footnote 182 Lazy ‘criminal tribesmen’ had apparently failed to become self-sufficient, industrious householders and had abdicated their duties as husbands and fathers. Indians involved in the administration of the CTA also attributed its failure to criminal tribe masculinity. For instance, Mehndi Hassan Khan, the landlord of the Bidauli Bawariya colony, attempted to divert official criticism of his management by pleading, ‘I am afraid to put on the screw at all [in discipline and the collection of revenue], as the men are turbulent, and I am afraid of them.’Footnote 183

These critical descriptions of registered men's masculinity ignored the most significant hurdle to the NWP's plan to produce cultivators—the landlessness of many registered people. Between one-third and a half of people criminalized under the CTA were landless. In Etah district in 1881, while 67 Aheriya families were tenant farmers, 64 families did not have tenancies.Footnote 184 In Lalitpur, 58 registered Sanorhiya men held land, but 31 were landless.Footnote 185 The landless Aheriya and Habura families made their living by ‘daily labor’ on other people's lands, making strings and baskets, cutting grass and firewood, and extracting dhak tree resin for the preparation of indigo.Footnote 186 Despite this varied labour, colonial officials claimed that landless people were living off crime. The Indian police consequently kept landless families under close surveillance.Footnote 187 Yet the NWP made only halting and limited efforts to solve the problem of landlessness. The disparaging attitudes of rural elites towards socially marginalized peoples who had ‘a bad reputation to start with’ apparently made it difficult to cajole rural landowners into giving tenancies to landless families.Footnote 188 In Etah by the mid-1880s, the authorities had achieved moderate success in securing tenancies for Aheriyas and Haburas, though many still had no land.Footnote 189

Gendered strategies of evasion and coping

Landlessness was one of several factors that led registered people to abscond, either by leaving without a pass or not returning after their pass had expired. Although entire families sometimes decamped, it was common for one or two members of a household to be absent, while the rest stayed behind. Due to the CTA pass system, landless registered people were usually unable to look for work outside their village. Their standard of living was reportedly precarious and, consequently, many left either permanently or temporarily.Footnote 190 Even people with land were often in difficult circumstances because of their small or insecure tenancies. For instance, landholding Sanorhiyas held seven bighas on average,Footnote 191 which ‘it would be impossible for these people to live on’. The inspector-general of police wrote that unless registered people had more substantial tenancies, they would have nothing ‘worth staying home for’ and would abscond.Footnote 192 Bad seasons and periods of famine affected registered people particularly badly, because their mobility—and thus their ability to find food and employment—was restricted. The ‘Great Famine’ of 1876–8 drove large numbers of registered people to escape, due to ‘the absolute inability of the people to find a living in their own district’.Footnote 193 In 1879, Aheriyas and Haburas were still ‘on the verge of starvation’ in several villages and 67 people consequently absconded.Footnote 194 Thus, numerous economic pressures were exacerbated by the CTA and pushed registered people to use mobility as a strategy of evasion and survival. In addition, the increased presence of the police in registered peoples’ everyday lives—a presence that was often harassing and violent—was a major reason why they ran away. W. Kaye, the commissioner of Jhansi, concluded that many Sanorhiyas had fled Lalitpur district because ‘the police are inclined to be too strict’.Footnote 195

British officials generally assumed that absconders were taking part in thieving expeditions.Footnote 196 In particular, administrators claimed that absent men were engaged in theft, since they primarily viewed male, not female, mobility as an indication of criminality.Footnote 197 It was reasonably common for rural people who had fallen on hard times to steal to supplement their incomes.Footnote 198 Criminalized men may have celebrated the masculine vigour of thievery ‘for its defiance of restraint’ in a ‘counter to the moral projects of the state’, which Pandian argues some men from the formerly notified Kallar community do in southern India today.Footnote 199 While it is impossible to determine the extent to which absconders actually committed crime, it is clear that some were not ‘wandering’ but had settled elsewhere. For example, in 1875 several Aheriya families escaped from their village, Jagatpur, and ‘settled for a time in the Kásganj circle’, to the north of Etah.Footnote 200

Interestingly, the gender dynamics of illegal mobility differed between the registered communities. By 1879, women dominated the adult population of the Bawariya colony in Bidauli because of the greater extent of male absconding. Whereas adult males had comprised around 30 per cent of the original 1,200-strong Bidauli population, by 1879 they made up only 13 per cent of the 844 remaining inhabitants.Footnote 201 In the majority of tenant farming families, Bawariya women either oversaw cultivation by hiring labourers—generally landless Bawariya men and women or Gurjar pastoralists—or were themselves directly involved in cultivation, which they carried out with the assistance of young people and female relatives.Footnote 202 In contrast to largely male mobility in the Bawariya community, Aheriya and Habura women absconded more frequently than men in the 1870s and 1880s. In some years, roughly equal numbers of adult men and women violated the pass system: in 1878, for instance, 28 men, 31 women, and 32 children.Footnote 203 Yet in most years, female absconders outnumbered their male counterparts considerably: in 1880, 25 women, 10 men, and 13 children, while in 1881, 40 women, 22 men, and 26 children left without permission.Footnote 204

Prior to the enforcement of the CTA, British officials had reported that Bawariyas, Aheriyas, and Haburas were generally ‘settled’, but that the men migrated seasonally or periodically.Footnote 205 Assuming that these reports were accurate, under the CTA a shift evidently occurred in patterns of mobility among the Aheriya and Habura, as adult women migrated more often than men. In contrast, among registered Bawariyas, men remained more mobile than women. In fact, the predominantly male migration that administrators noticed in these communities prior to the CTA was typical of rural North India and Bengal. In situations where tenancies were inadequate to support a family, men usually migrated, leaving behind their wives and children to take care of cultivation and other subsistence activities, since access to land was an ‘insurance against starvation’. For most rural people, the migration of families and single women was a last resort.Footnote 206 The apparent increase in female mobility in the registered Aheriya and Habura populations was largely a consequence of gendered policing practices under the CTA. Compared with Muzaffarnagar, where Bawariyas were registered, the Etah authorities were reluctant to punish Aheriya and Habura women, who apparently did ‘not steal’.Footnote 207 In 1879, the magistrate reported that men ‘alone are punished’ for absconding.Footnote 208 While Aheriya and Habura women's high degree of mobility was shaped by the CTA, female migration was hardly unheard of in socially marginalized groups. Samita Sen notes that poorer women ‘constituted a mobile labour force’ that was deployed to the households of various affinal and natal relatives, depending on ‘where the demand was greatest’.Footnote 209 When women migrated under the CTA, they probably fulfilled similar labour needs within extended kin networks. Given the gendered enforcement of the CTA in Etah district, women became a more flexible and useful ‘mobile labour force’ than men.

Criminalized groups also attempted to work within the CTA system and co-opt it to their own ends, though different forms of leverage were available to men and women. Men who were recognized as leaders of their communities could increase their status or secure economic benefits. British district officials were always on the lookout for ‘leading men’ who could act as go-betweens and influence their fellow ‘tribesmen’.Footnote 210 There is a longer history to these patronage ties: in the 1830s, William Sleeman had allowed ‘thug’ police informers whom he considered especially impressive gang leaders to reside in his compound with their families.Footnote 211 British officials regarded relationships with powerful men in ‘criminal tribe’ communities as crucial to establishing ‘intimate personal knowledge of and sympathy with’ these groups.Footnote 212

Although the British viewed these as paternalistic relationships, ‘leading men’ sought to manoeuvre these ties to their advantage. For instance, after the CTA was introduced to Etah, the authorities identified a Habura named Ram Lal as an ‘influential’ man. Subsequently, he led a group of registered Haburas to a tract of uncultivated land where they set up a new village, which Ram Lal named ‘Nagla Rám Lál Budduck’ after himself. The Etah authorities decided not to proclaim the new village under the CTA and the inhabitants were consequently deregistered.Footnote 213 Aikman, the magistrate, felt that this was ‘not of great consequence, as from all accounts the colony has been a great success’. In 1883, Ram Lal's relationship with local authorities again came in handy when the magistrate prevented Ram Lal's zamindar from ejecting the Haburas.Footnote 214 Being recognized as a ‘leading man’ allowed Ram Lal to become a village headman, to escape the CTA, and to secure official protection from his landlord. Similarly, local authorities granted a ‘farm’ to a Sanorhiya named Ghariba Dubey because he was a ‘great leader’ and a ‘noted man among the brotherhood’.Footnote 215 However, these relationships of patronage were fragile and conflict prone. In the mid-1870s, a man named Chathurwa, who was the ‘leading spirit’ of the Bawariya colony at Bidauli, was killed in a hand-to-hand fight with Mr Williams, the district superintendent of police, in murky circumstances. The NWP government feared that this would be a disaster for relations with the Bawariyas, but Chathurwa's son ‘was found to be one of the most prosperous and contented of the colonists’ and soon took his father's place as the ‘leading spirit’.Footnote 216 In sum, notions of masculine power and authority shaped the everyday interactions of criminalized groups with Indian and British officials.

Aside from ‘leading men’, other registered men attempted to leverage the CTA regime by becoming police informants or finding employment with the police.Footnote 217 Some women were also incorporated into the system of policing as informers. For instance, by 1877, 31 men were arrested at the Etawah train station with ‘spoil’ from ‘wandering excursions’ ‘through the instrumentality of one Musammát Nirma’, a female Bawariya informer.Footnote 218 In the late 1880s, news that Bawariya informers had ‘played the game of their brethren—repressed reports and [taken] bribes’ remained a cautionary tale for officials.Footnote 219 Although this lesson was premised on the stereotype of the untruthful native, it also suggests that male and female informers utilized their positions in ways unintended by the colonial state.

Another way for women to manoeuvre within the penal system was to engage in a sexual relationship with a colonial official, usually an Indian policeman.Footnote 220 Evidently, gender hierarchies and stereotypes of low-caste women's sexual availability patterned registered women's encounters with agents of the colonial state. In 1879, G. L. Ogilvie, Muzaffarnagar's superintendent, commented in passing: ‘I know even Bauriahs living in this district who are not proclaimed. One Bauriah woman even is kept by a constable in this place.’Footnote 221 The magistrate's subsequent investigation suggested that, ‘The woman living with a constable was kept by a constable before the registration [under the 1871 CTA], and on his death took up with another, and is now living with him at Muzaffarnagar.’Footnote 222 It seems that the Bawariya woman's relationship with her first constable partner had begun in the mid-1860s, following the relocation of 1,200 Bawariyas to Bidauli in 1863. Given that this unnamed woman had avoided registration under the CTA, we could interpret this as an example of her agency. Yet that she ‘took up’ with another constable following the death of her first partner, perhaps suggests that a high level of dependency was involved. Moreover, it is possible that either payment or coercion, or both, played a role in her relationships with the policemen. In the 1870s, there were numerous reports in North Indian newspapers of policemen ‘keep[ing] prostitutes near their chowkees’.Footnote 223 Such claims were inflected by middle-class Indian journalists’ harsh criticism of the police and were made ambiguous by the moralized and amorphous category of ‘prostitute’; nevertheless, they suggest the sexual trade that existed around police stations. There is also firm evidence from the early 1900s that ‘criminal tribe’ women in South India regularly experienced sexual violence at the hands of the police.Footnote 224 If the unnamed Bawariya woman had attempted to leverage her sexuality to avoid criminalization and registration, she did so against a broader backdrop of sexual commerce and sexual abuse centred on police stations.

Conclusion

The criminal tribe ‘problem’ brought together multiple official preoccupations, including deviant femininity and masculinity. The colonial ethnography of the ‘criminal tribes’, which was involved in the process of notification under the CTA, was overtly sexualized in its portrayal of female ‘immorality’. This official knowledge was partly shaped by Indian middle-class identity politics, especially stereotypes of hypersexual low-caste women. Colonial narratives of ‘criminal tribe’ masculinity dovetailed with middle-class Indian discussions of badmashes’ disorderly masculinity, though Indian commentators were additionally anxious about the sexual threat of such men. Elite indigenous and colonial depictions of criminalized men and women were conversant, though not equivalent.

The CTA aimed to make ‘criminal’ families into industrious peasant families by targeting women, men, and children for registration and sedentarization. However, in the late 1870s, the enforcement of the CTA bifurcated along gendered lines. Since the Sanorhiyas were not a family-based collective, unlike the ‘criminal tribes’ proper, only Sanorhiya men were registered in Lalitpur, while other districts policed family units. Yet the registered Sanorhiya men's families continued to be monitored and enlisted in settlement ‘experiments’, highlighting the wider importance of the family to the CTA regime. Where women were registered, the NWP did not seek to confine women's work to ‘feminine’ tasks or domestic spaces, due to gendered colonial assumptions about the sorts of labour that were appropriate for low-caste women. By implication, this closed off a common strategy to improve a family's social location: the domestication of women's agricultural work. Meanwhile, the NWP aimed to transform ‘criminal tribesmen’ into ‘steady’, hard-working cultivators. This project had complicated implications for registered men's status and masculinity, given the rural elite's general avoidance of the physical labour of ploughing, along with the socio-economic significance of cultivation to low-caste communities.

While British officials and Indian state agents blamed the apparent failure of the CTA on the aberrant masculinity of registered men, in fact it was criminalized communities’ insufficient tenancies, limited means of subsistence, and persistent resistance that frustrated government aims. Gender structured registered peoples’ strategies of evasion and survival. Regionally varying policing practices led criminalized communities to deploy women and men's mobility and labour in differing ways. Gender norms and hierarchies—in particular, notions of male leadership and female sexuality—also structured everyday interactions between registered people and police.

There was a striking contradiction in the CTA project in the 1870s and 1880s: the process of notification involved highly sexualized ethnography, yet the NWP did not micro-manage marriage and sexual practices or familial relationships. This was because the NWP initially saw sedentarization and agrarianization as panaceas that would transform not only labour and livelihoods, but also morality. However, from the 1890s, there were intensified official efforts to discipline criminalized peoples’ intimate lives. In 1891, the NWP lieutenant-governor, Auckland Colvin, began a ‘matrimonial experiment’ in the recently registered Sansi population.Footnote 225 Girls and young women who were detained in the Sansi settlement at Sultanpur were married to Sansi men (both registered and unregistered) who resided outside the settlement, with district magistrates acting as go-betweens for families and finding prospective grooms.Footnote 226 In 1894, Captain Weir, who oversaw an institution for Sansi children at Fatehgarh, reported to the Times of India ‘that in the course of the last year eight boys and girls of appropriately marriageable age were joined in the bonds of matrimony, and have been presented by the Lieutenant-Governor [Charles Crosthwaite] with a marriage dowry of twenty-five rupees each’.Footnote 227 The Fatehgarh couples were granted permission to emigrate to British Guiana and Suriname, and were thus exempted from the CTA.Footnote 228 British magistrates were thus taking on the role of matchmaker and the lieutenant-governor was assuming the place of the dowry-providing patriarch. Yet, intriguingly, the provincial government did not attempt matchmaking projects in other communities that were designated as ‘criminal tribes’ in the 1890s. Colonial governance of ‘criminal tribe’ conjugality was thus highly contextual.

As historians begin to rethink the history of the criminal tribes, examining previously neglected issues like concepts of citizenship,Footnote 229 paying sustained attention to gender is necessary. Historians’ limited exploration of gender has hamstrung their analyses of the CTA in several ways. For instance, the policing of Hijras under the same law as the ‘criminal tribes’ does not appear so inexplicable (or irrelevant) when we recognize the role of gender and sexuality in the criminal tribe project. Moreover, the existing literature offers an incomplete picture of the distinct experiences of criminalized women, men, girls, and boys. The CTA project, like the colonial state, was disaggregated and often fragmented; it thus had varied gender dynamics in different contexts.Footnote 230 Further research is needed to map shifts over time and localized variations in the management of gender, sexuality, and family under the CTA. Gender histories of multiple criminalized communities are necessary if we are to understand historical transformations in their gender and domestic norms. Only then can we make sense of the ways in which gender shapes the interactions of these still-marginalized groups (now known as Denotified and Nomadic Tribes or Vimukta Jati) with the state and dominant social groups in India today.

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66 Sleeman, W. H., A report on the system of Megpunnaism (Srirampur: Serampore Press, 1839)Google Scholar; C. Hervey, ‘General report …’ (extract), 15 September 1863, in NAI/FD/JB/11/1863/9-15; C. Daniell to Commissioner of Agra, 13 January 1870, in BL/IOR/P/92.

67 Parker to IGP, NWP, 15 June 1877, in NAI/HD/JB/04/1878/64-66.

68 E. Tyrwhitt, Report, 17 March 1864, quoted in Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97.

69 Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97.

70 Crooke, Tribes and castes, Vol. 1, pp. 233–4.

71 Crooke, Tribes and castes, Vol. 2, p. 475.

72 Parker to IGP, NWP, 15 June 1877, in NAI/HD/JB/04/1878/64-66.

73 Crooke, Tribes and castes, Vol. 1, pp. 234–6.

74 Crooke, Tribes and castes, Vol. 2, p. 478.

75 R. T. Hobart to Secretary, North-Western Provinces and Oudh (NWP&O), 26 March 1888, in BL/IOR/P/3382/A/Aug/1.

76 Parker to IGP, NWP, 15 June 1877, in NAI/HD/JB/04/1878/64-66; Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97.

77 The notification of this group was delayed because of their small numbers in Aligarh. Parker to IGP, NWP, 15 June 1877, in NAI/HD/JB/04/1878/64-66.

78 Daukes to Secretary, NWP, 17 April 1878, in NAI/HD/JB/04/1878/64-66.

79 Hinchy, Jessica, ‘Deviant domesticities and sexualised childhoods: female prostitutes, eunuchs and the limits of the state child “rescue” mission in colonial India’, in Divine domesticities: Christian paradoxes in Asia and the Pacific, (eds) Choi, Hyaewoel and Jolly, Margaret (Canberra: ANU Press, 2014), pp. 247–79Google Scholar.

80 Hinchy, Governing gender and sexuality.

81 Agyepong, Tera, ‘Aberrant sexualities and racialised masculinisation: race, gender and the criminalisation of African American girls at the Illinois Training School for Girls at Geneva, 1893–1945’, Gender and History 25, no. 2, 2013, pp. 270–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

82 Mayo Gazette, 20 July 1872, Selections, p. 399; Urdu Akhbar, 1 July 1871, Selections, pp. 347–8.

83 Bayly, Empire and information, p. 173.

84 Oudh Akhbar, 23 February 1872, Selections, p. 132.

85 For example, Nujm-ool Ukbar, 11 March 1868, Selections, pp. 154–5; Julwatoor, 25 July 1869, Selections, pp. 357–8.

86 Joshi, Sanjay, Fractured modernity: making of a middle class in colonial North India (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 2431Google Scholar.

87 Gupta, Gender of caste, pp. 30–43. See also Gupta, Charu, ‘Domestic anxieties, recalcitrant intimacies: representation of servants in Hindi print culture of colonial India’, Studies in History 34, no. 2, 2018, pp. 141–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

88 Gupta, Gender of caste, pp. 30–43.

89 Malhotra, Gender, caste and religious identities, pp. 2–3.

90 Sarkar, Hindu wife, Hindu nation, pp. 7–18; Joshi, Fractured modernity, pp. 69–74.

91 Sarkar, Hindu wife, Hindu nation, pp. 4–5, 7–18, 29–43, 69, 82–4.

92 Sen, ‘The savage family’, pp. 54, 71–2. This is a corrective to Chatterjee's argument: Chatterjee, Partha, The nation and its fragments: colonial and postcolonial histories (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993)Google Scholar.

93 Malhotra, Gender, caste and religious identities, pp. 2–3, 45–6, 49–50, 61–8.

94 Urdu Akhbar, 16 October 1871, Selections, pp. 624–5. See also Lawrence Gazette, 15 September 1871, Selections, pp. 562–3. On bride price, see Oldenburg, Dowry murder; Sen, Women and labour, pp. 85–9.

95 For example, Anjuman-i-Hind, 30 April 1870, Selections, pp. 184–5; Marwar Gazette, 15 January 1872, Selections, pp. 40–1; Marwar Gazette, 5 February 1872, Selections, p. 88. ‘Criminal tribe’ appears in English in the Selections and may be a translation of aparadhi jati (criminal caste) or aparadhi jan-jati (criminal tribe).

96 Singha, Radhika, ‘Punished by surveillance: policing “dangerousness” in colonial India, 1872–1918’, Modern Asian Studies 49, no. 2, 2015, p. 242CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

97 Lawrence Gazette, 23 September 1870, Selections, p. 366; Adebe Hind, 1 February 1868, Selections, p. 127; Dubduba Sekundree, 13 June 1868, Selections, pp. 323–4.

98 Singha, ‘Punished by surveillance’, p. 242.

99 Patiala Akhbar, 19 October 1874, Selections, p. 510.

100 In the Selections, translators used ‘budmash’ or, alternatively, ‘bad character’ or ‘persons of bad livelihood’, which are probably translations of badmash or possibly shohda (rogue or hooligan).

101 For example, Oudh Akhbar, 1 March 1872, Selections, pp. 135–6; Urdu Akhbar, 16 December 1872, Selections, p. 127; Marwar Gazette, 15 January 1872, Selections, pp. 40–1.

102 Lauh-i-Mahfuz, 28 June 1872, Selections, p. 342.

103 On middle-class gender norms in the NWP: Joshi, Fractured modernity, pp. 59–94.

104 C. Robertson to Secretary, Government of India (GI), 23 November 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1138/A/Dec/5.

105 J. R. Reid to IGP, NWP&O, 9 August 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/18.

106 J. Smith to Commissioner, Agra, 2 April 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/8.

107 Hobart, annual report, 1 July 1875, in BL/IOR/P/839/A/Jul/2; P. C. Dalmahoy, annual report, 21 September 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1138/A/Dec/2.

108 C. A. Elliott to H. L. Dampier, 26 September 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/12/1872/263.

109 Ibid.

110 Anderson, Clare, ‘Sepoys, servants and settlers: convict transportation in the Indian Ocean, 1787–1945’, in Cultures of confinement: a history of the prison in Africa, Asia and Latin America, (eds) Dikotter, Frank and Brown, Ian (London: Hurst and Company, 2007), pp. 198–9Google Scholar; Sen, Satadru, Disciplining punishment: colonialism and convict society in the Andaman Islands (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 86–9Google Scholar.

111 H. L. Dampier to Secretary, NWP, 24 December 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/12/1872/263-265; A. C. Lyall to C. A. Elliott, 15 March 1873, in NAI/HD/JB/03/1873/153-154.

112 C. A. Elliott to H. L. Dampier, 1 October 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/03/1873/153-154.

113 ‘Rules’, in NAI/HD/JB/01/1874/119-21.

114 S. Barrow, annual report, 26 May 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/5; R. T. Hobart, annual report, 21 September 1877, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Nov/12.

115 ‘Rules’, in NAI/HD/JB/01/1874/119-21.

116 Act No. XXVII, in BL/IOR/V/8/42.

117 ‘Rules’, in NAI/HD/JB/01/1874/119-21.

118 J. Smith, statement of Aheriyas and Haburas for 1880–1, 23 April 1881, in BL/IOR/P/1614/A/Aug/12.

119 For example, J. Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 12 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/14.

120 Elliott to Dampier, 26 September 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/12/1872/263. On the use of laws as ‘tactics’ in the management of population: Foucault, Michel, ‘Governmentality’, in The Foucault effect: studies in governmentality, with two lectures and an interview by Michel Foucault, (eds) Burchell, Graham, Gordon, Colin and Miller, Peter (Hertfordshire: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991), pp. 87104Google Scholar.

121 B. W. Colvin to IGP, NWP, 17 July 1876, in BL/IOR/P/839/A/Jul/5.

122 Dalmahoy, annual report, 21 September 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1138/A/Dec/2.

123 Smith, annual report, 9 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2208/A/Jan/26.

124 Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97.

125 H. B. Webster to Secretary, NWP&O, 20 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Jan/25; Inden, Ronald, Imagining India (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1990), pp. 133, 139–40Google Scholar.

126 Gilmartin, ‘Migration and modernity’, pp. 11–3.

127 Sen, ‘Rationing sex’, p. 31.

128 J. Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 24 April 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2208/A/Sep/19.

129 O. L. Smith, annual report, 13 June 1881, in BL/IOR/P/1614/A/Aug/8.

130 J. W. Quinton to IGP, NWP&O, 4 May 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/11.

131 Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 12 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/14.

132 Hobart, annual report, 1 July 1875, in BL/IOR/P/839/A/Jul/2. See also J. Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 21 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/May/45.

133 C. Robertson to IGP, NWP&O, 30 April 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/May/47.

134 J. W. Quinton to IGP, NWP&O, 27 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/13.

135 Italics added. Webster to Secretary, NWP&O, 20 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Jan/25.

136 W. C. Bennet to IGP, NWP&O, 19 October 1891, in BL/IOR/P/8389/A/Oct/27; J. Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 16 April 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/35; J. J. McLean to Commissioner, Jhansi, 17 October 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jan/11.

137 Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 16 April 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/35.

138 G. E. Ward to Secretary, NWP&O, 17 December 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jan/10.

139 Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 16 April 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/35.

140 See also H. B. Webster to Secretary, NWP&O, 15 June 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/23.

141 Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97.

142 Only adult labour was noted in J. W. Williams, ‘B—Statement showing the number of Baurias’, 13 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/13.

143 W. C. Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11.

144 Williams, ‘B—Statement’, 13 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/13.

145 Nelson, Claudia, Family ties in Victorian England (London: Praeger, 2007), Chapter 1Google Scholar; Davidoff, Leonore and Hall, Catherine, Family fortunes: men and women of the English middle class, 1780–1850 (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1987)Google Scholar; Tosh, John, Manliness and masculinities in nineteenth-century Britain: essays on gender, family, and empire (Harlow, UK: Pearson Longman, 2005), pp. 2750Google Scholar; Steinbach, Susie, ‘Can we still use “separate spheres”? British history 25 years after Family fortunes’, History Compass 10, no. 11, 2012, pp. 826–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

146 Anderson, ‘Gender, subalternity and silence’, pp. 145–66; Anderson, Legible bodies, pp. 36–9; ‘Regulations’, in Straits Settlements Records (SSR), H14, 14/05/1825; 1857–58 Straits Settlements administration report in Colonial Office (CO)/275/1; McNair, John Frederick Adolphus, Prisoners their own warders (London: Archibald Constable and Company, 1899), p. 90Google Scholar.

147 Straits Settlements proceedings for the fourth quarter of 1855, in National Archives of Singapore (NAS)/NAB/1671/4/1855; Pieris, Anoma, Hidden hands and divided landscapes: a penal history of Singapore's plural society (Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2009), pp. 142–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Appendix to the report of the Committee on Prison-Discipline (Calcutta: Baptist Mission Press, 1838), Appendix 4, p. 257Google Scholar.

148 Sen, ‘Rationing sex’, pp. 33–4; Sen, Disciplining punishment, p. 105.

149 Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11; A. Sells, ‘A—Statement showing the Bauria families who have cultivated continuously’, 27 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/12; Williams, ‘B—Statement’, 13 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/13.

150 Sen, Women and labour, pp. 63–5, 74–83.

151 I am not suggesting that masculinity was a cause of colonial agrarianization programmes.

152 Foucault, ‘Governmentality’.

153 Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DGIP), NWP, quoted in ‘Report of … Operations’, in NAI/HD/JB/10/12/1870/32.

154 This idea drew on the earlier establishment of the Khandesh Bhil Corps in the 1820s: Gordon, ‘Bhils’, pp. 136–8.

155 J. Sladen to F. M. Lind, 23 August 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/30.

156 Singh, Hari, Report on the administration of the criminal tribes in the Punjab for the year ending December 1920 (Lahore: Superintendent, Government Printing, Punjab, 1921), pp. 16–7Google Scholar.

157 On colonial ideas about peasants and pastoralists: Bhattacharya, Neeladri, ‘Pastoralists in a colonial world’, in Nature, culture, imperialism: essays on the environmental history of South Asia, (eds) Arnold, David and Guha, Ramachandra (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1995), pp. 4985Google Scholar.

158 W. C. Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11.

159 Smith to Commissioner, Agra, 2 April 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/8; O. L. Smith, annual report, 30 June 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Sep/12; J. W. Sharpe to Magistrate, Etah, 16 April 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Sep/16; O. L. Smith, annual report, 9 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2208/A/Jan/26.

160 R. T. Hobart, annual report, 17 July 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/21.

161 Italics added. F. M. Lind to IGP, NWP, 28 August 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/24.

162 Tosh, Manliness and masculinities, pp. 86–98.

163 Inden, Imagining India, pp. 137–48.

164 Italics added. O. L. Smith, annual report, 26 May 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/25.

165 Pandian, Crooked stalks, pp. 19–22, 34–48, 68–75, 84–5.

166 Kasturi, Malavika, Embattled identities: Rajput lineages and the colonial state in nineteenth-century North India (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 25Google Scholar.

167 This North–South contrast is based on the conflicting conclusions of Pandian, Kasturi, and Pinch. Pinch, William R., Peasants and monks in British India (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), p. 112Google Scholar.

168 This was partly due to the Rent Act of 1859, which allowed tenants with limited occupancy rights who could prove 12 years of continuous cultivation to gain ‘prescriptive rights of occupancy’. Kasturi, Embattled identities, pp. 53–62.

169 Ibid.

170 Pinch, Peasants and monks, pp. 85–6.

171 Rawat, Reconsidering Untouchability, pp. 80–4.

172 Pinch, Peasants and monks, pp. 107–11; Rawat, Reconsidering Untouchability, pp. 162–3.

173 H. M. Stanley Clarke, annual report, 22 July 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/2.

174 W. Holmes to Secretary, NWP&O, 2 October 1893, in BL/IOR/P/4514/A/Jan/13; R. H. Brereton to Secretary, NWP&O, 20 June 1900, in BL/IOR/P/5832/A/Aug/18.

175 M. Tweedie to IGP, NWP&O, 10 June 1887, in BL/IOR/P/2909/A/Aug/24; A. Ollivant to Secretary, NWP&O, 23 May 1890, in BL/IOR/P/3606/A/Aug/30.

176 W. C. Bennet to IGP, NWP&O, 19 October 1891, in BL/IOR/P/8389/A/Oct/27.

177 Italics in original. E. Tyrwhitt to Secretary, NWP&O, 27 September 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1138/A/Dec/1.

178 C. Robertson to Secretary, GI, 10 April 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/18.

179 C. Robertson to Secretary, GI, 14 October 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/23.

180 Stoler, Ann Laura, ‘Epistemic politics: ontologies of colonial common sense’, The Philosophical Forum 39, no. 3, 2008, pp. 349–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

181 On the CTA's bodily dimensions: Tolen, ‘Colonizing and transforming’.

182 Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11.

183 Mehndi Hassan Khan, statement given to J. Sladen, 3 August 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/27.

184 O. L. Smith, annual report, 25 May 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/8.

185 R. T. Hobart to Secretary, NWP&O, 28 June 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/7.

186 Smith, annual report, 25 May 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/8.

187 J. Smith to Commissioner, Agra, 2 April 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/8; Smith, annual report, 30 June 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Sep/12; Sharpe to Magistrate, Etah, 16 April 1884, in BL/IOR/P/2008/A/Sep/16; Smith, annual report, 9 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2208/A/Jan/26.

188 Smith to Commissioner, Agra, 2 April 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/8. See also J. C. Robertson to IGP, NWP&O, 9 April 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/7.

189 Webster to Secretary, NWP&O, 15 June 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/23.

190 Smith, annual report, 25 May 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/8.

191 A bigha was generally five-eighths of an acre.

192 Hobart to Secretary, NWP&O, 28 June 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/7.

193 Stanley Clarke, annual report, 22 July 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/2.

194 Barrow, annual report, 26 May 1880, in BL/IOR/P/1467/A/Aug/5.

195 W. Kaye to IGP, NWP&O, 24 April 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/14.

196 Robertson to Secretary, GI, 10 April 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/18.

197 Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11.

198 Singha, Radhika, A despotism of law: crime and justice in early colonial India (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 179–93Google Scholar; Wagner, Kim A., Thuggee: banditry and the British in early nineteenth-century India (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), pp. 100–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

199 Pandian, Crooked stalks, p. 122.

200 J. D. Young to Magistrate, Etah, 24 April 1885, in BL/IOR/P/2460/A/Jul/32.

201 Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97; Plowden to Secretary, NWP&O, 8 January 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/11.

202 Sells, ‘A—Statement’, 27 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/12; Williams, ‘B—Statement’, 13 December 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/13.

203 C. Robertson to Secretary, GI, 5 June 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/10.

204 See J. Smith, statement, 23 April 1881, in BL/IOR/P/1614/A/Aug/12; Smith, annual report, 25 May 1882, in BL/IOR/P/1816/A/Aug/8.

205 For example, Palmer, ‘Note’, 28 March 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/07/1872/97; Hobart to Edwards, 25 September 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/08/1873/61; Thomas, ‘List of villages’, 20 September 1872, in NAI/HD/JB/08/1873/61; Crooke, Tribes and castes, Vol. 2, pp. 475–8.

206 Sen, Women and labour, pp. 65, 69–73.

207 J. C. Leupolt to Commissioner, Agra, 8 April 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/May/52.

208 Extract of Leed's letter, 16 April 1878, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Apr/7.

209 Sen, Women and labour, pp. 83–5.

210 Hobart, annual report, 1 July 1875, in BL/IOR/P/839/A/Jul/2.

211 Freitag, ‘Crime’, p. 236.

212 Hobart, annual report, 17 July 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/21.

213 Smith, annual report, 9 June 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2208/A/Jan/26.

214 R. S. Aikman to Commissioner, Agra, 30 April 1883, in BL/IOR/P/2208/Jan/33.

215 Dubey was spelt ‘Dobey’ or ‘Doobey’. Liston to Commissioner, Jhansi, 12 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/14.

216 Hobart, annual report, 17 July 1876, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Jan/21.

217 S. Clarke, annual report, 22 July 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/2.

218 R. M. Pocock to DIGP, NWP&O, 17 September 1877, in BL/IOR/P/840/A/Nov/13.

219 A. Ollivant to IGP, NWP, 27 February 1887, in BL/IOR/P/3382/A/Aug/2.

220 Reportedly, some European officials had sexual relationships with Sansi women, but registered people were in more regular contact with Indian police. R. T. Hobart to Secretary, NWP&O, 26 March 1888, in BL/IOR/P/3382/A/Aug/1.

221 C. Donovan to Commissioner, Meerut, 8 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/4.

222 J. L. Ogilvie to Magistrate, Muzaffarnagar, 2 May 1879, in BL/IOR/P/1281/A/Nov/5.

223 Benares Akhbar, 10 July 1873, Selections, p. 477. See also Roznamcha, 2 September 1873, Selections, pp. 565–7. For police rapes of respectable and ‘noble’ women: Matla-i-Nur, 3 March 1874, Selections, p. 99; Vritt Dhara, 13 April 1874, Selections, p. 145; Koh-i-Nur, 19 September 1874, Selections, p. 441; Vakil-i-Hindustan, 23 December 1874, Selections, pp. 650–2.

224 Radhakrishna, Dishonoured by history, p. 62.

225 ‘Citizenising the criminal’, Times of India, 29 May 1894, p. 4. On marriage expense funds and infanticide campaigns: Sen, ‘The savage family’, pp. 69–70.

226 J. Woodburn, to all Commissioners (except Kumaon and Jhansi), 16 June 1891, in BL/IOR/P/4071/A/May/320.

227 ‘Citizenising the criminal’, p. 4.

228 One ‘girl’ was returned from the emigration depot as ‘unfit’, however, and sent to Sultanpur. J. B. Thompson, annual report, 1 October 1894, in BL/IOR/P/4711/A/Jan/5.

229 Bajrange, Gandee and Gould, ‘Settling the citizen’.

230 Comaroff, ‘Colonialism, culture, and the law’, pp. 305–14.