'Sushmita Pati reveals that the people at these embattled sites engage with the state's acquisition processes in unanticipated ways: they were neither always confrontational, nor merely resigned to their fates. Instead, the author uses life stories, court judgments, architectural forms, local political institutions and urban rental markets to provide a rich description, arguing that people often participated actively and purposefully in the process by which agricultural land became private urban property. This work should animate, for a long time to come, discussions about styles of urbanisation, economic growth and political forms of villages incorporated into the city.' Janaki Nair, author of Mysore Modern: Reconceptualising the Region under Princely Rule 'Pati's dexterous research and elegant prose takes us on an engaging journey through Delhi's 'urban villages' that shows us the importance of attending to the vernacularisation of capital through deeply situated dynamics of rent. We will be learning from this book for quite a while yet.' Sharad Chari, author of Fraternal Capital: Peasant-Workers, Self-Made Men, and Globalization in Provincial India 'Properties of Rent catalyses new thinking about the entanglements of land, labour and capital in urbanising India, the vital roles urban villages perform in Delhi's urban mosaic, and the neglected social life of rent in shaping cityscapes and caste futures. Desire, loss, alienation, violence and hope all collide in Pati's evocative book. Ethnographically rich and conceptually bold, Properties of Rent makes a range of provocative interventions, in debates spanning geographical political economy, anthropologies of capitalism and urban theory.' Vinay Gidwani, author of Capital, Interrupted: Agrarian Development and the Politics of Work in India