This book approaches the archaeology of the Harappan culture of Pakistan and India from the view point
of the early state. It attempts to tease out information on the mobilization of labour, the organization
of production, the direction of overseas trade by a newly formed elite, and the management of scarce
water resources by the rulers. It discusses the environment and productivity of the culture, the sequence
of excavations, early ideas of the civilization as quintessentially Indian, evidence for warfare and the hand
of the state behind certain kinds of settlement morphology and artefactual equipment. It asks whether
the residents of Mohenjo-daro lived in kin-group clusters, and attempts to explain, through cross-cultural
analogy, why the citadel sites are located where they are. A new idea on sailing routes is tentatively
suggested, and it is argued that it was elite intervention and management that secured both floodwater
supplies at Dholavira and some degree of urban sanitation at Mohenjo-daro. Multiple views of the
reasons for the end of the civilization are discussed in the final section of the book.