1st Edition
Complexities of Social Change in Bangladesh Historical Aspirations and Contemporary Realities
Introduction: Understanding Social Change with Theoretical Insights and Conceptual Premise
Monirul I. Khan, Kazi Mahmudur Rahman, Sharmeen Ahmed and Jannatul Ferdous
1. Economic Transformation and the Nature of Capitalist Development in Bangladesh
Kazi Mahmudur Rahman
2. Historical Terrain of Politics: An Exegesis of Continuities and Discontinuities
Monirul I. Khan and Qudrate Khoda
3. Agrarian Structure, Power Structure and Major Cultural Fabric
Monirul I. Khan
4. Religion and Identity Formation: Secularization and Islamization
Sharmeen Ahmed
5. Family and Kinship: Disintegration and Reproduction
Jannatul Ferdous and Monirul I. Khan
6. Women’s Empowerment: The Case of Unique Transformation
Md Reza Habib and Shejuti Nure Maksurat
7. Urban and Rural Health: Market and Community
Marufa Akter and Kazi Mahmudur Rahman
8. Urbanization in Dhaka City: An Investigation into its Rapidity and Volatility
Sultana Razia and Monirul I. Khan
9. Education as a Major Driver: Universalization vs Compartmentalization
Kazi Mahmudur Rahman and Mahbuba Dewan
10. Threats and Vulnerabilities: Conceptualizing Social Instabilities
Monirul I. Khan, Nazia Mahmood, and Mohammad Mahfuzul Islam
Afterword
Monirul I. Khan, Kazi Mahmudur Rahman, Sharmeen Ahmed and Jannatul Ferdous
Biography
Monirul I. Khan, PhD, is Adjunct Professor at Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB). He is a sociologist and academic with extensive experience in teaching and research on a wide range of socio-economic issues, including agrarian structure, health, poverty, child labour, and women’s empowerment. He served as a professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Dhaka, where he taught courses on peasant society, poverty, social statistics, social change, and sociological theory until his retirement in 2024. In addition to his academic career, he has worked as a consultant for several international development organizations, including ILO, the World Bank, UNDP, CARE, and BRAC. He is the author of two books and has published more than 50 articles, working papers, and book chapters in national and international journals.
Kazi Mahmudur Rahman, PhD, is Professor and former Head of the Department of Social Sciences and Humanities at Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB). His research focuses on labour markets, the political economy of the ready made garments industry, poverty, inequality, trade, and global governance. He has conducted numerous projects in collaboration with international institutions, including the London School of Economics, University of New South Wales, Freie University Berlin, and University of Gothenburg, and has consulted for organizations such as ILO, USAID, ADB, UNDP, Oxfam Australia, BRAC, and UN Women. Professor Rahman has taught at IUB, ULAB, East West University, University of Southern Queensland, and University of Queensland, and was a visiting fellow at BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD). He has published widely in leading journals and book chapters.
Sharmeen Ahmed is Senior Lecturer, Department of Social Sciences and Humanities at the Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB). She received Master of Arts in Sociology from the Department of Sociology, Boston University, USA. Earlier she served as the acting head of the Department of Social Sciences and Humanities and Associate Director at the Centre for Social Science Research at Independent University, Bangladesh. She actively supervised several undergraduate theses and was actively involved in various committees set by the university. Ahmed’s research interests include migration, environment, gender stratification, and globalization, and she has published various journal articles and book chapters.
Jannatul Ferdous, PhD, is Associate Professor at the Department of Public Administration, Comilla University, Bangladesh. She has a diverse academic back ground and extensive research contributions. Ferdous holds a master’s degree, an MPhil in public administration, and a PhD in development studies from Dhaka University. Her research interests include population migration, governance, trust, gender, public policy, climate change, and development.






