Description
Notes on Criminal Classes in the Bombay Presidency is a historical examination of criminal behavior and social structures in colonial India. M. Kennedy’s detailed study documents the characteristics, patterns, and classifications of criminal classes that existed within the Bombay Presidency administrative region.
The work offers valuable insights into 19th-century Indian society, exploring the socioeconomic factors that contributed to criminal activity and the systems used to categorize and manage criminal populations. Kennedy’s observations provide researchers and historians with primary source material for understanding colonial law enforcement, social hierarchy, and the intersection of traditional and colonial justice systems in India.
This scholarly work remains relevant for academic studies in criminology, colonial history, Indian social history, and the development of criminal justice systems during the British Raj period.







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