<P>The demand for economic inclusion has increasingly intensified, as manifested by the growing movements of farmers, workers and social activists. Therefore, the question of adequate social representation of marginalized and underprivileged communities has to be made pivotal in the discourse of inclusion. </P><P>This book investigates selected aspects of labour market informality in India. It examines the key factors that have expedited labour informality¿contractualisation¿in the manufacturing sector since the early 1990s. It analyses the features of informality and inclusion from the perspective of not just class but also the caste hierarchy in Indian society, thus offering readers an exhaustive overview of economic inclusion following the economic reforms and providing fresh insights into labour market informality through the lens of the social divisions in Indian society. </P><P>Developed on a wide canvas of multiple processes, policies, and factors that have contributed to this p